“I didn’t do anything,” I said, but my voice betrayed me, because in that instant I was no longer standing in a hospital office. I was back in June of 2015, in a hotel room and a fight and a mistake I had buried so deep I had nearly convinced myself it never happened.
Dr. Whitman stood.
“I’ll have the full genetic analysis by morning. For now, I suggest you all get some rest. Sophie is stable.”
Graham left without another word, Stephanie trailing after him. I stayed where I was until the office was almost empty, then looked at Dr. Whitman.
“What aren’t you telling me?”
She closed the door.
“Ms. Hayes, there’s something I need to discuss with you privately. Can we talk after dinner?”
By the time Dr. Whitman called me back into her office, it was after eight. The hospital hallways had gone quiet except for the steady hum of fluorescent lights and distant rolling carts. Graham had left hours earlier. Sophie and Ruby were asleep under the watch of night nurses. It was just me and a truth I did not want to hear. Dr. Whitman’s office was cramped with framed diplomas and stacks of journals. She gestured toward the chair and closed the door behind me.
“Ms. Hayes, I expedited the DNA analysis using a rapid PCR protocol under Washington emergency medical law. I’m permitted to run genetic testing without full parental consent when it is necessary to identify potential bone marrow donors for a life-threatening condition.”
She paused, her expression careful.
“The results are complicated.”
My hands locked around the armrests.
“Just tell me.”
She turned the computer screen toward me. Charts. Numbers. Genetic markers. Meaningless to my eye, fatal in hers.
“First, the good news. Mitochondrial DNA confirms that you are the biological mother of both Sophie and Ruby. There is no question about that.”
“And the bad news?”
Dr. Whitman met my eyes.
“Graham Pierce is not the biological father of either child.”
The room tilted.
“What?”
“The DNA analysis shows no paternal genetic match between Graham and Sophie or Ruby. He is not their father.”
I couldn’t breathe.
“That’s impossible. Graham and I were together when I got pregnant. We were engaged. I didn’t…”
“Ms. Hayes,” Dr. Whitman said gently but firmly, “there’s more.”
Nothing in the world could have prepared me for what came next.
“Sophie and Ruby have different biological fathers.”
The words made no sense. I stared at her.
“They’re twins.”
“They are,” she said. “But they are dizygotic twins. Fraternal, not identical. That means two separate eggs were fertilized. According to the DNA analysis, those eggs were fertilized by sperm from two different men.”
“How is that even possible?”
“It’s called heteropaternal superfecundation,” Dr. Whitman said. “It is rare, but it does happen. Roughly one in four hundred twin pregnancies. A woman releases two eggs during the same ovulation cycle and has intercourse with two different men within a twenty-four to forty-eight hour window. Each egg is fertilized by a different man’s sperm.”
I sat there trying to catch up to my own life. My mind started clawing backward through eleven years of memory, searching for a door I had locked and bricked over.
“Eleven years ago,” I whispered. “June 2015.”
Dr. Whitman waited. I closed my eyes, and it all came back in one long, humiliating rush. Graham and I had been fighting for weeks. He wanted me to quit my job at the architecture firm. He wanted me to focus on planning the wedding he had already started arranging without me. He wanted control over my career, my schedule, my life. We had a blowout on a Thursday night. I told him I wasn’t sure about the wedding anymore. He called me ungrateful and accused me of still being in love with Julian Reed, my ex-boyfriend. He wasn’t entirely wrong. The next night I went to a company event at the Portland Art Museum. I didn’t invite Graham. I needed space. And Julian was there. Julian Reed, the man I had loved before Graham, the man I had almost married. We had broken up three years earlier because I was not ready to settle down. He asked me to marry him, and I said no. I chose my career. Then I met Graham. Julian and I had not spoken in months, but that night, standing in front of a Rothko painting and drinking too much wine, we started talking. About work. About life. About all the wrong turns people take and all the ones they pretend were right. We ended up at his apartment. I told myself it was closure. I told myself it didn’t mean anything. But when I woke up in his bed the next morning, I knew I had made a mistake. I went back to Graham that Sunday. I apologized. I said yes to the wedding. I tried to bury Julian. Two weeks later, I found out I was pregnant.
“Ms. Hayes?”
I opened my eyes. Dr. Whitman was watching me carefully.
“I know who the other father is,” I said. “His name is Julian Reed.”
Dr. Whitman nodded slowly.
“We’ll need to contact him. If he is the biological father of one of the girls, he may be a compatible donor. Do you know how to reach him?”
“Yes.” My voice was barely audible. “He’s an architect. He lives in Seattle.”
“Can you call him tonight?”
“I haven’t spoken to him in eleven years.”
“I understand this is difficult. But Sophie is running out of time. We need to test all potential donors as quickly as possible. If Julian is Sophie’s biological father, he has a fifty-percent chance of being a compatible match. Those are significantly better odds than finding an unrelated donor through the registry.”
I thought of Julian. The man I had loved. The man I had hurt. The man who did not know he might have a daughter fighting for her life in a hospital bed.
“I’ll call him.”
Dr. Whitman handed me a sheet of paper.
“Here is what you need to tell him. We need him here by Friday for HLA testing. Explain the situation as clearly as you can. And Ms. Hayes…” She paused. “I know this is overwhelming, but right now the most important thing is finding a donor. The rest can wait.”
I stood on shaking legs.
“What about Graham? When are you going to tell him?”
“I am required to inform him as the legal guardian, but under the circumstances I wanted to speak with you first. I’ll call him tomorrow morning.”
“He’s going to lose his mind.”
“That is not your responsibility,” Dr. Whitman said firmly. “Your responsibility is to help save your daughter.”
I walked out of her office in a daze. The hospital corridors were nearly empty. The only sounds were beeping monitors, ventilation fans, the faint rustle of nurses’ shoes. I found a quiet waiting room and pulled out my phone. Julian’s number was still in my contacts. I had never been able to delete it. I stared at the screen for a long time with my thumb hovering over the call button, wondering what kind of sentence even begins a conversation like this. Hi, it’s Isabelle. Remember that night eleven years ago? It turns out one of my daughters may be yours. Also, she has leukemia. Can you come to Seattle? In the end I stopped trying to script it and pressed call. The phone rang once, twice, three times.
Then his voice, unchanged and suddenly devastating.
“Hello?”
“Julian,” I said, and my voice broke. “It’s Isabelle. I need your help.”
There was a long pause. I could hear his breathing, steady and calm the way it always had been. Then:
“Isabelle? Is that really you?”
“Yes. I’m sorry to call like this. I know it’s been years and I have no right to ask you for anything, but…” My throat tightened. “Something’s happened. Something terrible. I don’t know who else to turn to.”
“Are you okay?”
The concern in his voice was immediate and genuine. That was Julian. Even after all that time, even after everything, he still led with concern.
“I’m not hurt,” I said quickly. “But Julian, I have twin daughters. They’re ten years old. And one of them, Sophie… she has leukemia. She needs a bone marrow transplant.”
Another pause. I could almost hear him trying to rearrange the world into something that made sense.
“I’m so sorry,” he said finally. “That’s devastating. But Isabelle… why are you calling me?”
This was the hardest part.
“Because the hospital ran DNA tests to identify potential donors, and they discovered something. The twins have different biological fathers. It’s rare, but it happens. And one of them…” I drew in a breath and forced the words out. “One of them might be yours.”
Silence. A silence so long I thought the call had dropped.
“Julian?”
“I’m here.” His voice was quiet now, stunned. “You’re saying I might have a daughter?”
“Yes. From that night. June 2015. I didn’t know. I swear to you, I didn’t know until today.”
“And she has leukemia?”
“Yes.”