.”
I looked at the twins, four years old, clutching their crayons.
“I have my severance money, Doc,” I said. “Put his name on the list.”
“I know about the lymphoma.”
***
The next evening, I returned home with the boys. The house felt hollow, as if haunted by old laughter. Joshua was at the kitchen table, his eyes red and a mug of untouched coffee in his hands.
He looked up. “Hanna…”
“You let me quit my job, Joshua,” I said. “You let me fall in love with those boys. You let me believe this was our dream.”
His face crumpled. “I wanted you to have a family.”
“No.” My voice shook. “You wanted to decide what happened to me after you were gone.”
He covered his face. “I told myself I was protecting you. But really, I was protecting myself from watching you choose whether to stay.”
“I wanted you to have a family.”
That one landed between us like broken glass.
“You made me a mother without telling me I might be raising them alone,” I said. “You don’t get to call that love and expect gratitude.”
He started crying again, but I didn’t soften. Not yet.
“I’m here because Matthew and William need their father,” I said. “And because, if there is time left, it will be lived in the truth.”
He started crying again.
***
The next morning, I paced the kitchen, phone in hand. “We have to tell our families,” I told my husband. “No more secrets.”
He nodded. “Will you stay?”
“I’ll fight for you,” I said. “But you have to fight too.”
***
Telling our families was worse than either of us expected. Joshua’s sister cried, then turned on him.
“You made her become a mother while planning your death?” she said. “What is wrong with you?”
My mother was quieter, which somehow hurt more. “You should have trusted your wife with her own life,” she told him.
Joshua sat there and took it. For once, he didn’t defend himself.
“Will you stay?”
That afternoon, we sat at the table with paperwork spread everywhere, medical forms, trial consents, and sticky notes. Joshua rubbed his eyes.
“I don’t want the boys to see me like this.”
I squeezed his hand. “They’d rather have you sick and here than gone.”
He looked away, but signed the last form.
***
Every day after blurred into hospital commutes, spilled apple juice, temper tantrums, and Joshua’s body shrinking inside his old hoodies. One night, I caught him recording a video for the boys. He didn’t see me.
“Hey, boys. If you’re watching this, and I’m not there… just remember, I loved you both from the moment I saw you.”
He looked away.
I closed the door quietly. Later, Matthew crawled into Joshua’s lap. “Don’t die, Daddy,” he whispered, like he was asking for one more bedtime story.
William climbed up beside him and pressed his toy truck into Joshua’s hand. “So you can come back and play,” he said.
I turned away then, because it was the first time since I’d overheard that phone call that I let myself cry for all of us.
Some nights I cried in the shower, the water hiding the sound. Other days I’d snap, slamming a cupboard, then apologize as Joshua pulled me close, both of us shaking.
When his hair started to fall out, I pulled out the clippers. “Ready?”
“Don’t die, Daddy.”
“Do I have a choice?” he asked, and the boys perched on the bathroom counter, giggling as I shaved their dad’s head.
***
Months dragged by. The trial and its heaviness nearly broke us. But then, one bright spring morning, my phone rang.
“It’s Dr. Samson, Hanna. The latest results are all clear. Joshua is in remission.”
I dropped to my knees. This was it.
“The latest results are all clear.”
***
Now, two years later, our home is chaos, backpacks, soccer cleats, crayons everywhere.
Joshua tells the boys I’m the bravest person in the family.
I always answer the same way: “Being brave isn’t staying quiet. It’s telling the truth before it’s too late.”
For a long time, I thought Joshua wanted to give me a family so I wouldn’t be alone.
In the end, the truth nearly broke us.
It was also the only thing that kept us alive.
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