Night in the maternity recovery wing was a strange thing.
It was not truly quiet. Machines humd steadily, monitors beeped in soft rhythms, and nurses spoke in hushed voices as they moved through the hallway. Yet another kind of quiet settled over the floor, an emotional stillness that wrapped the space around Willow’s bed like a dim cocoon.
The hours blurred together until ti itself seed to lose its edges. Night did not move forward so much as fold inward, pressing down on the room until everything felt slowed and intimate. Even the air felt heavier, thick with antiseptic, breath, and the quiet anticipation that lived in hospital corridors after midnight.
Zane stayed exactly where Willow had asked him to be.
He was not in the chair and he was not across the room.
He stood beside her bed with his forearms resting on the rail, his body angled toward hers as if his presence alone could shield her from every unseen threat.
He had placed himself there with a kind of stubborn permanence. If sothing went wrong again, it would have to go through him first. That rule had written itself into his bones long before he ever spoke it aloud.
Willow slept in fragnts, drifting through brief pockets of rest that never lasted long enough to truly restore her strength.
Every ti she shifted, pain rippled through her abdon.
Every ti the pain sharpened, her breath caught in her chest.
And every single ti, without fail, she whispered his na.
"Zane?"
Zane was already there.
"I am right here," he murmured each ti, his voice low and steady. "I am not going anywhere."
Relief ca imdiately. It showed in the way her shoulders softened and in the way the tight line of her mouth slowly eased.
His na had beco more than a word.
It had beco a tether.
He brushed damp strands of hair away from her forehead, checked the blanket tucked around her waist, adjusted the pillow supporting her shoulders, and pressed the call button when her pain climbed too high.
He never stepped back from the bed.
He did not step away when his neck began to ache.
He did not sit when exhaustion burned behind his eyes.
He did not move when nurses gently suggested he rest.
He would not leave.
He could not leave.
He had lost too much ti already, and every minute beside her felt like a small repaynt toward a debt he knew he could never fully settle.
At 2:13 in the morning Willow woke with a sudden sharp gasp. The sound tore quietly from the back of her throat as her hand flew to her incision.
Her face twisted with pain.
Zane was on his feet imdiately.
"Easy," he said softly. "Breathe with . Just breathe."
Her eyes were glassy and unfocused, swimming with tears.
"It hurts," she whispered. "It hurts so much."
"I know," he answered gently as he pressed the call button. "I know, sweetheart. I have you."
His voice steadied her when her body betrayed her again.
He felt helpless and necessary at the sa ti. He could not take the pain away, but he could make sure she did not face it alone.
The nurse arrived quickly. She checked Willow’s vitals, adjusted her dication, and spoke in the calm reassuring tone used for mothers fighting through fear and exhaustion.
"You are doing beautifully," she said. "Your body is adjusting and everything we see is normal."
Willow nodded weakly, but her eyes never left Zane.
She watched him the way a compass needle seeks north, orienting herself around the only thing that felt certain.
When the wave of pain finally receded, she sank back against the pillows. Her eyelids drooped heavily as a tear rolled slowly toward her temple.
Zane caught it gently with his thumb.
She exhaled softly.
Her fingers, weak and trembling, reached toward his hand.
He t them halfway and laced their fingers together carefully, as if he feared she might break if he held on too tightly.
"I am so tired," she whispered, her voice thin with exhaustion and dication.
"I know," he said quietly, though his voice cracked slightly at the edges. "Sleep. I will be right here when you wake up."
The promise was not dramatic.
It was absolute.
She blinked slowly as her gaze moved across his face with a fragile and unguarded softness.
"I reached for you today," she murmured in a half dream.
Zane froze.
Her next breath barely ford a sound.
"I did not an to," she whispered. "But I did."
Zane lowered his head slightly and swallowed the tight emotion rising in his chest.
"You do not have to explain it," he said gently. "Your heart knows where to go. That is enough."
Her eyes closed.
This ti she did not resist sleep.
She drifted into it with their hands intertwined, her breathing steadying as if his presence anchored her safely to the earth.
Across the city Victor sat alone in the quiet of his penthouse.
He leaned back in the leather chair near the window while the skyline stretched out beneath him like a living organism that refused to sleep.
Lights glowed along the avenues and tall buildings shimred against the darkness. Sowhere far below, a siren rose and faded into the distance, reminding him that life continued whether he was ready for it or not.
He had not turned on a single lamp.
The phone rested loosely in his hand, dark and forgotten.
He had not attempted to sleep.
Instead he had let the hours pass while he stared through the glass at the restless city beyond.
From that height the streets looked orderly and predictable.
The world outside appeared calm.
Nothing like the hospital room that replayed endlessly behind his eyes.
Victor leaned his head back against the chair and tightened his jaw slightly.
The emotion behind the movent was not anger and it was not jealousy.
It was reality.
He had seen the way Willow turned in her sleep.
He had seen who she reached for when fear broke through her voice.
He had seen whose presence steadied her breathing before conscious thought could catch up.
Truth like that did not ask permission.
It simply existed.
Victor exhaled slowly.
His gaze drifted across the glowing skyline while his thoughts moved inward.
"If he breaks you again," he said quietly into the empty room, "I will not forgive it."
The words were not a threat.
They were a promise.
A promise to her, to himself, and to the part of him that still loved her enough to step aside without disappearing.
The city continued to glow outside the glass.
Victor remained where he was, letting the truth settle into sothing he could live with.
Then he whispered sothing softer, sothing closer to a prayer than a decision.
"Be happy, Willow."
He was not giving up.
But for the first ti he was no longer fighting the truth either.
Back in the hospital room Zane adjusted the blanket carefully over Willow’s abdon and brushed his thumb gently across her cheek.
"You are safe now," he whispered. "Tomorrow you will see Zana again."
Willow’s fingers twitched faintly against his hand as if searching for him even in sleep.
Zane leaned closer and rested his forehead lightly against the back of her hand.
"I will prove it to you," he breathed softly. "Every day. Every hour. I will be here."
The room answered him only with the quiet rhythm of machines and the steady sound of Willow’s breathing.
And in the calm hum of the hospital night Willow slept peacefully for the first ti since her world had cracked open.
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