The ICU did not look dramatic.
That was the first betrayal.
Lorrlyne had expected urgency to announce itself. Sirens. Shouting. A corridor sprint. Sothing unmistakable that would let her et fear head on like an opponent with a na. Instead, the unit received her with quiet competence, dim lighting, and a kind of disciplined stillness that suggested the real danger was not noise, but ti.
Zane lay behind glass.
He was not in a private room that pretended illness was polite. This room made no attempt to soften reality. Monitors glowed. Tubing traced pale lines across his skin and into the machinery. A humidified hiss of oxygen rose and fell in the background with the steady, insistent patience of sothing that did not care about pride.
His chest moved.
Not fully on its own.
The rise and fall was shallow, assisted by the pressure of the mask sealed around his mouth and nose. His breathing sounded wet at the edges, as if the air had to negotiate its way through fluid and inflad tissue to reach what remained functional.
He looked smaller.
Not diminished in spirit, because spirit did not matter here. Smaller in a purely biological way, as if his body had been stripped down to systems, priorities, and the bare mathematics of survival.
Lorrlyne paused at the threshold and forced herself to enter with control. She had learned that rushing was only another form of panic, and panic made people careless.
A nurse glanced up from the workstation and read her instantly.
"You’re his mother," the nurse said.
"Yes," Lorrlyne replied.
"I’m Anna," the nurse said. She did not offer comfort first. She offered information. "I’m going to explain what we’re watching, and what we’re doing about it."
Lorrlyne nodded once. "Please."
Anna stepped aside so Lorrlyne could see the monitor clearly without standing directly over the bed like an intruder. The numbers on the screen were steady enough to avoid alarms, but unsettled enough to make the skin at the back of Lorrlyne’s neck tighten.
"His oxygen saturation is fluctuating," Anna said. "We want it consistently higher. It’s holding with high flow oxygen, but his lungs are not exchanging well."
Lorrlyne’s gaze moved to her son’s face. His lashes were damp. His brow was faintly furrowed even in sleep, like so stubborn part of him still wanted to argue with the concept of rest.
"Why is it fluctuating?" Lorrlyne asked.
"Pneumonia is infection plus inflammation," Anna replied. "The air sacs that should be filled with air can fill with fluid and inflammatory debris. That ans oxygen has to work harder to move into the blood, and carbon dioxide has to work harder to leave."
Lorrlyne did not flinch. She absorbed. She filed. She translated it into what mattered.
"So he is working too hard to breathe," she said.
"Yes," Anna confird. "Even when he is not fully awake, his body is still trying to compensate."
"His fever?" Lorrlyne asked.
Anna’s expression tightened slightly. "It’s been high. The fever is stubborn, which is why we are aggressive with antibiotics and fluids. Fever increases the body’s demand for oxygen. That makes this harder."
Lorrlyne stared at the tubing. The IV lines. The way modern dicine could look so calm while doing sothing so violent and necessary.
"Has he improved at all since last night?" she asked.
Anna’s professionalism did not crack, but it softened at the edges.
"He stabilized after admission," she said. "He is not crashing. But his improvent is slower than we want."
Lorrlyne stepped closer to the bed.
Zane’s hand lay open at his side, as if he had finally stopped clenching. She took it carefully, not squeezing hard, just anchoring herself to sothing real. His palm was too warm, a heat that did not belong to a healthy adult in a cool room. It was the heat of a system fighting.
"You should not be doing this alone," she murmured, not because she believed he could hear her, but because words had always been her way of enforcing truth.
A doctor entered with the quiet authority of soone who had done this too often to fear it, and too seriously to dismiss it.
Dr. Patel did not waste ti.
"Mrs. Reyes," he said. "I want to update you."
Lorrlyne released one controlled breath. "Tell ."
"He has not improved as quickly as we hoped," Dr. Patel said. "That does not an he won’t. Pneumonia can turn slowly, especially when it is advanced before treatnt begins."
"And the danger," Lorrlyne said, because euphemism was an indulgence she did not permit.
"The danger is respiratory failure," Dr. Patel replied without hesitation. "Right now he is maintaining oxygenation with high flow support. If his lungs continue to struggle, or if he tires, we may need to escalate."
Lorrlyne’s grip on Zane’s hand tightened by a fraction, the only sign of emotion she allowed.
"What does escalation an?" she asked.
"Noninvasive support is what you’re seeing," Dr. Patel said, gesturing toward the mask and the equipnt. "If that becos insufficient, we may need to move to chanical ventilation."
Lorrlyne held his gaze steadily. "Intubation."
"Yes," Dr. Patel said. "A breathing tube and a ventilator."
"Is that likely?" she asked.
"It is possible," he answered. "Not inevitable. But possible, and the next twenty four to forty eight hours matter."
Lorrlyne looked at her son again. His mouth was slightly parted under the mask. His breath ca faster than it should have, even with assistance, like a runner refusing to stop.
"Why is he not waking?" she asked.
"We are keeping him lightly sedated," Dr. Patel explained. "Not deeply. He is very uncomfortable when awake, and discomfort increases breathing effort. We want to reduce his work of breathing so his body can heal instead of fight."
Lorrlyne understood the subtext. Light sedation ant the margin was thin. Too awake ant too much work. Too sedated carried its own risks. Everything here was balance, and balance could shift.
"You said he is stable," Lorrlyne said. "I need you to tell what stable ans in this room."
Dr. Patel respected the question.
"Stable ans he is not in imdiate collapse," he said. "His blood pressure is holding. His heart is compensating. His oxygen levels are acceptable with support. But stable does not an safe. Stable ans we have a window to treat him before he worsens."
Lorrlyne nodded once.
"I want to be called if there is any change," she said.
"You will be," Dr. Patel replied. "I also want to ask you sothing now, because if we need to intubate, we move quickly. Does your son have any docunted preferences, any advanced directives?"
"He does not," Lorrlyne said. "He is forty sothing and arrogant enough to think his body will always obey him."
Anna kept her face neutral, but her eyes flicked briefly toward Zane as if she agreed.
"All right," Dr. Patel said. "If we need to intubate, we will proceed. This would be life support, not elective intervention. I’m telling you now so you are not blindsided."
Lorrlyne’s jaw tightened. "Thank you."
Dr. Patel left, and the room returned to its quiet machinery.
Minutes passed. Then more.
Lorrlyne sat without moving, watching the numbers as if she could will them into order. The monitor displayed a heart rate still too high. Oxygen saturation that refused to settle into comfort. A respiratory rate that climbed when his fever surged, then eased when dication pushed it down, then climbed again like a stubborn tide.
Every ti he coughed, it looked wrong.
Even sedated, his body would jerk with a wet, deep pull from his chest, and afterward his oxygen reading would dip, as if the act of coughing stole what little reserve he had.
Anna returned with a fresh bag of dication and checked the equipnt with practiced hands.
"He’s fighting," Anna said quietly, not as praise. As observation.
"He always has," Lorrlyne replied.
Anna hesitated, then said, "Sotis people like him don’t co in until their body forces them. When they finally do, it can look like it’s getting worse before it gets better."
Lorrlyne’s eyes stayed on her son. "How much worse is acceptable?"
Anna’s voice stayed calm. "We watch trends. If his oxygen needs increase, if his breathing effort increases, if he becos more confused when awake, if his blood pressure drops, those are signs he is losing ground."
Lorrlyne nodded. "And right now?"
"Right now he’s walking the line," Anna said, then added, because she understood the woman in front of her was not fragile, only precise, "and we’re walking it with him."
Lorrlyne’s phone vibrated in her hand.
She did not look at it imdiately. She checked her watch first.
Past noon.
Never the ti she would call Willow.
Their calls lived in the evening, after Zana was asleep and the day had stopped demanding performance. Evening calls were controlled. Chosen. Morning or midday calls belonged to ergencies, and ergencies did not ask permission.
The screen lit again.
Willow.
Lorrlyne stared at the na for a beat and felt sothing inside her harden into purpose. Willow had been allowed distance because it had been a choice. This was no longer a choice. This was physiology.
There was no ti to cushion the fear.
She answered on the first ring.
"Willow," Lorrlyne said, voice low.
"Lorrlyne... hi," Willow replied instantly, breath already tight. "Has sothing happened?"
Lorrlyne kept her eyes on Zane. She did not look away from the mask, the tubing, the numbers that refused to behave.
"Zane collapsed this morning," she said. No warm-up. No softening. "Around nine. At work. He has pneumonia. It is advanced. He is in the ICU."
Silence.
Then a sharp inhale, cut off too quickly, like Willow had reached for air and found sothing solid in the way.
Not disbelief. The silence of a mind trying to catch up to a reality that had moved faster than its assumptions.
"Is he awake?" Willow asked, her voice thinning around the edges. "He... he was answering ssages last night."
"No," Lorrlyne said. "He is sedated. They are supporting his breathing."
Another pause.
A quieter one.
"Supporting?.... as in ventilator?" Willow whispered, the word unfamiliar in her mouth, like it belonged to a different story. "That’s... that’s for people who can’t—"
"They are trying to avoid it," Lorrlyne replied, precise. "But they are preparing in case his lungs do not turn quickly."
Willow exhaled slowly, uneven. "He told it was just a cold," she said. Not arguing. Not accusing. Just stating the fact as it collapsed.
Her breath hitched, then steadied by force.
"I’m booking the flight," she said, the decision sudden and absolute. "I’m leaving today."
"Good," Lorrlyne replied. "Call when you have a boarding ti."
Willow swallowed. "Is he in pain?"
"He is being kept comfortable," Lorrlyne said. "Strain will worsen this. His body is working too hard."
A beat.
"I thought I had ti," Willow whispered. "I thought we had days. A week. Sothing."
Lorrlyne watched the oxygen number dip, then climb again.
"So did he," she said. "That is how people like my son get hurt. They assu ti is loyal."
"I’m coming," Willow said again, quieter now, but no less certain.
The call ended.
Lorrlyne lowered the phone and returned her hand to Zane’s.
Outside the glass, the ICU remained quiet, almost gentle.
Inside it, the numbers continued their careful argunt with the infection, and for the first ti in a long ti, Zane Reyes was not the one deciding what happened next.
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