A few hours later, I sat in a sterile hospital waiting room, Mia stiff beside me.
Neither of us had spoken since the doctor told us we had to wait, that they couldn’t tell us anything because we weren’t family.
The tension was suffocating. Finally, Mia broke the silence.
“You’ve got it all wrong,” she said, her voice trembling but defiant.
“Oh, do I?” I asked, the bitterness in my tone making her flinch.
“The baby isn’t his,” she said. “And he was never my boyfriend… God, I don’t know how you could even think that!
I was dating a guy called Dylan when I left. This is his child.”
I blinked. “So, where’s this Dylan now?”
“He’s gone,” she said flatly.
“He didn’t want anything to do with me, or the baby when I told him.” Her gaze dropped to her hands, twisting anxiously in her lap.
“Joshua found me crying on his doorstep. I had nowhere else to go.”
“And he took you in,” I said, my voice hollow.
“Yes.” She looked up at me, her eyes glossy with unshed tears.
“He’s been helping me. He gave me a place to stay and money for groceries.
He even told me to talk to you, but I wasn’t ready. Not after how we left things.”
Every sharp word I’d thrown at her six months ago came rushing back. My chest ached.
I had pushed her away, and she’d found comfort in the arms of someone I trusted. I had been so wrong.
“Mia, why didn’t you come home?” I asked, my voice cracking.
I couldn’t argue. The worst part was, she was probably right.
When Joshua’s wife, Suzanne, arrived, she was frantic; her face pale.
“What happened?” she demanded, her voice shrill with worry.
I stammered out an explanation, but before I could finish, the doctor emerged.
“Ma’am,” he said, his tone grave, “your husband has a subdural hematoma.
We need to perform surgery immediately to relieve the pressure on his brain.”
I heard the words but struggled to process them. Surgery. Brain.
The implications were too much to grasp. Suzanne broke into sobs, clutching the doctor’s sleeve.
“What about the cost?” she asked through her tears. “We don’t have the savings for something like this.”
I froze.
I knew what I had to do.
Hours later, I returned to the hospital with an envelope clutched in my hand. It was all the money I had scraped together: my savings, my emergency fund, and even the jar of loose change on my kitchen counter.
“Here,” I said, shoving it into Suzanne’s hands. “For the surgery.”
She stared at me, her mouth opening and closing like a fish out of water.
“Elliot, I can’t…”
“Yes, you can,” I said firmly.
“He’s my best friend. And he’s been more of a father to Mia than I’ve been lately. I owe him this.”
Relief washed over me, but it was tinged with guilt.
I had almost destroyed the life of the man who had saved my daughter.
When Joshua woke, I was the first to apologize, the words tumbling out in a messy, tear-filled rush.
He smiled weakly and muttered, “Took you long enough.”
And Mia — my stubborn, strong-willed daughter — took my hand in hers.
“I’ll come home,” she said softly. “But only if you promise to try. To trust me.
To… let me grow up.”
I swallowed the lump in my throat and nodded. “I promise.”