Part One: The Room That Changed Everything
The labor had lasted nineteen hours.

I know because I counted. Between contractions, between the moments when the pain crested so high that language dissolved entirely, I watched the clock on the wall of the delivery room — an ordinary white clock with a thin red second hand — and I counted. Not because time mattered in any practical sense, but because counting gave me something to hold onto when my body felt like it was splitting in two.
Daniel had been there for the first four hours. He sat in the chair beside the window, scrolling through his phone, occasionally glancing up when a nurse entered the room. Around hour five, he said he needed to get some air. He came back smelling faintly of cigarettes and something else — something sweet and alcoholic — and sat back down without explanation. By hour nine, his mother Elaine had arrived, sweeping into the room with the particular energy of a woman who believes her presence is itself a gift. She rearranged the flowers on the windowsill. She asked a nurse whether the hospital had a better room available. She did not ask how I was feeling.
Melissa, Daniel’s younger sister, arrived at hour twelve. She perched on the arm of Elaine’s chair and the two of them spoke in low voices about someone’s upcoming engagement party, about a restaurant they wanted to try in the city, about whether Daniel’s cousin had finally sold his apartment. I lay in the bed six feet away, my hospital gown damp, my knuckles white around the bedrail, and I listened to them talk about everything except me.