Lauren watched as he grabbed a notepad from the junk drawer and drew columns labeled: time, temperature, medicine, fluids, food, symptoms.
A weak laugh escaped her. “You and your spreadsheets.”
“Spreadsheets save lives.”
That nearly made her smile.
He sanitized the thermometer, checked Noah’s fever again, then carried him to the couch. Noah whimpered softly but rested against Ethan’s shoulder while Ethan rubbed slow circles across his back.
Lauren sat quietly at the island, looking smaller somehow.
“Tell me what happened while I was gone,” Ethan said.
She stared down at the floor. “It’s not important.”
“It’s important to me.”
Lauren swallowed hard. “Your mom called Monday saying she and Melissa wanted to stay here for a few days because Melissa was between apartments. I told her you were away and Noah still had daycare, but she said family shouldn’t need invitations.”
Ethan’s jaw tightened.
“At first things were okay,” Lauren continued softly. “Then Noah got sent home Tuesday with a fever. I thought they’d help. But your mom kept saying she didn’t want to interfere with my parenting. Melissa slept until noon, ordered takeout, left dishes everywhere, and complained whenever Noah cried during her shows.”
Ethan closed his eyes for a moment.
“Why didn’t you tell me?”
“I tried,” Lauren admitted. “But you were busy in sessions. And every night when we talked, you sounded exhausted. I didn’t want to add more stress.”
“Lauren.”
“I know,” she whispered, voice breaking. “I know I should’ve said something. But every time I asked your mom for help—laundry, holding Noah, anything—she acted like I was failing. She kept saying, ‘When Ethan was little, I handled everything without drama.’ Eventually I just stopped asking.”
Ethan felt Noah’s breathing stutter against his shoulder.
He pictured Patricia’s offended expression as she walked out the door. His mother had always known how to disguise cruelty as advice. As a boy, Ethan had mistaken that for strength. As a man, he had avoided confrontation by pretending her comments didn’t matter.
Lauren had been paying for that silence.
“I should’ve set boundaries years ago,” he admitted.
Lauren looked up slowly. “You always tried to keep the peace.”
“I protected the wrong peace.”
The words hung heavily between them.
Then Noah coughed again, deeper this time. Ethan straightened immediately. “That sounded worse.”
Lauren stood at once. “He’s been coughing like that since this morning.”
Ethan checked Noah’s breathing, counting quietly under his breath. It seemed faster than normal, though panic blurred his judgment.
“I’m calling the nurse line again,” he said.
A few minutes later, after explaining Noah’s symptoms, the nurse advised them to bring him to urgent care immediately because of the ongoing fever and worsening cough.
Ethan grabbed his keys.
Lauren looked stricken. “I should’ve taken him sooner.”
“No.” Ethan’s voice turned firm instantly. “We’re not doing that. We’re taking him now.”
Fear moved them quickly. Ethan packed the diaper bag while Lauren changed Noah into warm pajamas. Ethan grabbed wipes, a blanket, the insurance card, and Noah’s stuffed blue elephant that he refused to sleep without.
Right before they left, Ethan’s phone buzzed.
Mom.
He silenced it.
The phone buzzed again.
Then another message appeared:
You embarrassed me in front of your sister. We need to talk.
Ethan stared at the screen before typing back:
No. My son is sick. My wife is exhausted. You sat in my kitchen while she handled everything alone. Do not come back tonight.
The typing dots appeared. Vanished. Returned again.
Ethan flipped the phone face down.
At urgent care, doctors diagnosed Noah with dehydration and a respiratory infection. Serious, but thankfully not life-threatening. The physician explained that waiting much longer could have become dangerous. Noah received fluids, oxygen monitoring, and medication before they were finally allowed to return home.
On the drive back, Lauren cried quietly in the passenger seat.
Ethan reached across the console and squeezed her hand.
“I thought maybe I was overreacting,” she whispered. “Your mom kept making me feel dramatic.”
“You weren’t.”
“She said I was too soft with him.”
Ethan glanced at Noah sleeping in the back seat, cheeks still flushed pink.
“My mother doesn’t decide what good parenting looks like in this family,” he said softly. “We do.”
Lauren turned toward the window before he could fully see the tears falling again.
Back home, Ethan carried Noah upstairs while Lauren followed behind him, too exhausted for words.
Once Noah was settled in his crib with the humidifier running, Ethan found Lauren sitting on the edge of their bed staring blankly ahead.
He knelt in front of her.
“I’m sorry,” he said quietly. “Not only tonight. For every time I let her interrupt you. For every time I excused her behavior by saying she meant well. For every moment I left you feeling alone while I stood right there beside you.”
Lauren’s face crumpled.
“I never wanted you to choose between us,” she whispered.
Ethan took both her hands in his.
“I chose you the day I married you,” he said. “I just forgot to act like it.”
Downstairs, his phone continued buzzing across the kitchen counter.
This time, he ignored it completely.
Part 3:
By the next morning, Patricia had called eleven times and left four voicemails. Melissa had also sent a long rant accusing Ethan of being “dramatic,” “controlling,” and “brainwashed by Lauren.” Ethan didn’t read any of it aloud.
Noah’s fever had dropped to 100.9. He still looked miserable, but he managed to drink water from his dinosaur cup and eat half a banana while sitting in Ethan’s lap. That tiny improvement eased the tension hanging over the house.
Lauren slept until ten in the morning.
Ethan protected that sleep like something sacred.
He fed Noah, cleaned the kitchen, started laundry, and stripped the guest room where Patricia and Melissa had stayed. On the nightstand he found empty water bottles, crumpled tissues, and Lauren’s missing phone charger. In the bathroom trash he discovered takeout containers Melissa had apparently hidden instead of throwing away properly.
Every small discovery hardened his resolve.
When Lauren finally came downstairs wearing a cardigan, she stopped at the sight of the spotless counters.
“You didn’t need to do all this.”
“Yes,” Ethan answered softly. “I did.”
She studied him carefully. “What happens now?”
He knew exactly what she meant.
Patricia would never quietly let this go. She believed apologies were things owed to her, never from her. Melissa would repeat whichever version of the story sounded the most dramatic. By lunchtime, the rest of the family would probably hear that Lauren had manipulated Ethan against his own relatives.