Iâd known something was wrong the moment Ellaâs texts trailed off into silence.
By the time I finished my last surgical consult, I couldnât stand it any longer. I slipped out of the hospital, telling myself Iâd surprise her at her apartment, maybe find her on the couch with the twins, too busy or too stressed to reply. A thousand rationalizations.
But as I drove, that hollow ache in my chest only deepened. I climbed the familiar stairwell, each step echoing ominously. At her door, I knocked, heart in my throat.
Silence. No infant cries, no shuffle of footsteps.
A chill ran through me. Come on, Ella, open the door. I knocked harder, tried calling her phoneâstraight to voicemail. Blood pounding in my ears, I debated forcing the lock. That was when I noticed Mrs. Waverly hovering at the end of the hall, grocery bag in hand, concern etched on her features. Hoping for good news, I stepped away from Ellaâs door.
âMrs. Waverly,â I said, swallowing hard, âhave you seen Ella? She hasnât been answering me.â
The elderly neighbor offered a sympathetic frown. âIâm sorry, Dr. Mortoli. Ella moved out this morning.â
My mind blanked. âWhat?â
She nodded, eyes full of regret. âSaid she was leaving the city altogether.â
My pulse thundered. âDid she say why?â
Mrs. Waverly shrugged, face somber. âOnly that it was time to move on. Looked like sheâd been crying half the night. Poor thing. Iâll miss her and the girls.â
I managed a stiff nod, mind swirling. âThank you,â I murmured, stepping back.
My gaze flicked to Ellaâs door one last timeâlocked tight, no sign of life. She left me without a word. My phone buzzed in my pocket, a text that made my heart seize with hope. Maybe sheâs telling me to come find her.
Ella: Iâm sorry, Dom. The girls and I have left NYC. This is whatâs best for everyone. Iâm changing numbers soon, so donât bother texting this one. Please take care of yourself, your work, and your other kids.
Her final goodbyeâno address, no chance to argue. Just a curt apology and a severance of ties.
Like I was nothing to her.
I typed a frantic reply anyway, only to receive a âMessage not deliveredâ notice. She mustâve already shut off her phone. A hollow sensation spread through my chest, each breath a struggle.
She actually left.
Eventually, I trudged back down the stairs, out into the twilight city. The shock gave way to a swirl of anger at her for bailing, at myself for not seeing it coming, at Seth for piling on the pressure that drove her away, at the hospital for complicating things, at everyone and everything I could think of. By the time I got home, I was numb.
The next few days dragged by in a blur. I went through the motions at the hospitalâperforming surgeries on autopilot, giving curt nods to staff. Everyone noticed I was off my game, though my hands stayed steady. Years of training kept me from mistakes. When I was not in the OR, I obsessively checked my phone, hoping Ella would reach out again.
She didnât.
The koi pond at the hospital had lost its shine. Everything had. So I took my meals in the breakroom, which left me open to Sethâs verbal sparring at random. As I stared at a stale sandwich I couldnât bring myself to eat, he strolled in, smug and smiling.
âDom,â he said, voice dripping with false concern, âI heard your girlfriend took off. Tough break.â
My jaw clenched. I forced myself to speak evenly. âThis isnât your concern.â
He raised his brows in mock innocence. âJust repeating what I heard. Something about her landing a job at a Michelin-starred placeâmust be quite the career move. Shame she didnât see fit to include you in that plan, huh?â
Ambition? Was that what this was all about? But her text implied she was fleeing for my sake. Could both be true? Was I that naive?
I bit back a retort, shaking my head. âYou donât know a damn thing.â
Seth shrugged, sipping his coffee. âThe admin role demands focus. Hard to keep that when your personal life is a train wreck.â
I spun on him, rage flaring. âStay the hell away from me.â
He raised his cup in a mock toast, eyes gleaming with satisfaction.
Iâm giving him exactly what he wants. That realization scorched me. Iâm done.
Storming out, I made it to my office before my knees threatened to buckle. Was he right? Was this some kind of karma for what Iâd done with Jodie? I lost one partner because I gave my all to my career, and now I was losing another because she gave her all to her career.
And for what?
Around midday, I justâ¦gave up. After completing a consult, I strode to HR, ignoring the stares of staff who tried to stop me from barging in. Mrs. Fletcher, the HR manager, looked up in alarm as I approached.
âDr. Mortoli?â She glanced up from her screen. âIs everythingâ ââ
âIâm resigning,â I said bluntly, my heart hammering. âEffective immediately.â
Her eyes widened. âButâyour candidacy for admin is still under reviewâ ââ
I let out a harsh laugh. âIâm done here.â
She hesitated, as if searching for the right words. âYouâre certain? This isâ¦quite sudden.â
âYes, Iâm sure. Please email me whatever paperwork you need.â My chest felt hollow.
Her expression was heavy with concern. âSure, butâ ââ
I got up and left, striding out of HR. Staff parted for me in the hallway, eyes flicking with curiosity. Let them talk. Itâs not my problem anymore.
But the freedom felt suspiciously like despair. My mind flitted to the only family I had left here. I got in my car, knuckles white on the steering wheel. My phone pinged onceâGina texting me about brunch next weekend.
I swallowed, thinking how Iâd rarely see her if I left. But our brunches had become an excuse for Leo to take his anger out on me and little more than that.
Ella wasnât the only one who needed a fresh start.
I sped all the way there. Once inside the sketchy building, I climbed the rickety stairs, each creak echoing the tension in my nerves. At the door, I pounded with more urgency than usual. After an agonizing minute, it cracked open, revealing Leoâs disheveled form.
His eyes flicked over me, annoyance plain. âWhat do you want now, Dom?â He spat my name like an insult, refusing to call me ad.
I mustered my last few ounces of calm. âI quit the hospital.â
He blinked, crossing his arms. âSo? Why should I care?â
âBecause I might leave the city for good, and youâre my son, whether you accept it or not. I need to see if we can bury the hatchet.â
Leoâs jaw tightened, but he didnât slam the door. âFine,â he muttered, stepping aside. âIf you want to talk so bad, make it quick.â
Inside, the loft was the same chaotic messâpaint cans all over, reeking of stale smoke. My eyes burned from the acrid smell, but I focused on what I came to say. âElla left me. Took the twins somewhere. I have no clue where she went.â
He raised a brow, expression guarded. âThe way you are about your partners, are you really that surprised?â
Pain flared in my chest. âIâm devastated and furious.â
Leo shrugged, though something flickered in his gaze. âSo youâre alone, then. Sucks.â
âListen, Iâm not here to guilt you, or talk about Ella. I justâ¦canât leave Manhattan without telling you how sorry I am for everything. I couldnât save your mom, I know you blame me. But I canât rewrite history.â
His lips pressed into a thin line, an old bitterness returning. âYou shouldâve known she was sick. Youâre a doctor.â
âI know that makes it hard on youâ ââ
He snorted in derision.
âBut for once in your life, imagine how that makes me feel.â
He blinked up at me. âNot âimagine how that makes me lookâ?â
I swallowed the guilt of having said that once many years ago. Maybe that was why he hated me. In a rambling grief tirade, Iâd said that to himâthat her getting ill and my not noticing it meant that other doctors doubted me. Maybe that was why I had so much to prove with the admin promotion.
âI was a shitty man for saying that before, but I was a shitty man who was grieving, and I hope you never know what itâs like to say the wrong thing to the wrong person at the wrong time the way I said that to you.â I blew out a breath to steady myself. âI wouldâve done anything to save her, Leo. Anything.â
He let out a ragged breath, raking his fingers through unkempt hair. âEven after she was gone, you buried yourself in surgery. Gina and I had no one.â
âYou had me, and I failed you. You deserved better than that. You both did. I botched everything back then.â
âYeah. You did.â
We both exhaled, and our eyes met. âFunny. I think thatâs the first time weâve ever agreed about anything from back then.â
He nodded, a ghost of a smile on his face.
âThereâs more. Iâm leaving New Yorkâmaybe tomorrow, maybe next week. If you never want to see me again, thatâs your choice. But I want you in my life, if you want the same thing.â
Leoâs eyes dropped to the floor, tension radiating from him. âSo, is that it? Just âsorryâ and you bail?â
âIâm not bailing on you. After leaving the hospital, I have no reason to stay hereâEllaâs gone, Gina doesnât need me, and you hate meâ ââ
âYou think I hate you?â
âAre you trying to say you donât?â
He swallowed, tears glistening. âIâmâ¦Iâm tired of hating you. But I canât just forget everything.â
âIâm not asking you to forget. Or even fully forgive. Iâll never be able to do that for myself, so how could I ask that of you? But we can move forward.â
âJesus, Dom, youâre asking a fucking lot.â
Hearing him call me by my name instead of Dad was another knife twist, but I bit it back. âI love you and Gina. I justâ¦messed it all up.â
He looked ready to argue, but the tension drained from his shoulders. Slowly, he turned away, dropping onto a paint-stained couch. âWhat future do we even have?â
I approached, sinking onto the edge of the battered coffee table. âOne where weâre not strangers. Where I check in on you, and you donât slam the door in my face.â
He gave a watery scoff, swiping at his eyes. âThatâs a low bar.â
âWe can start low.â
For a long moment, we sat in silence, the gritty loft air feeling thick. Then Leo exhaled shakily, glancing at me. âIt sucks that youâre leaving, but I guessâ¦if thatâs what you need to doâ¦â
âI canât stay here. Too many memories.â
He swallowed, a single tear slipping down his cheek. Then, so quietly I almost missed it, he murmured, âIâ¦I donât hate you, Dad. Not anymore.â
The word dad cracked something inside me, tears Iâd held back surging. I reached out, and to my shock, he let me hug him. We clung to each other in the musty loft, father and son trying to rebuild a bond shattered by years of grief and anger.
Eventually, we pulled apart, both wiping our eyes. The gloom of the loft seemed less oppressive. I stood, exhaling unsteadily. âIâll let you breathe,â I murmured. âBut call me anytime, okay? And Iâll text you when I figure out where Iâm going.â
âAll right,â he said softly, glancing away. âDomâDad. Be safe.â
A lump rose in my throat. I gave him a final pat on the shoulder, then headed out, leaving behind the echoes of so many regrets. Outside, the cityâs neon glow felt harsh, but my step was a fraction lighter.
Dad.
At least he and Gina still acknowledged me. Marissa and Summer? Would they ever get the chance?
My chest remained hollow, the sting of Ellaâs absence gnawing at me. Maybe Iâd prove her wrong, track her down eventually. Or maybe, if she truly wanted me out of her life, Iâd respect that. The thought crushed me, but I had no fight left in me.
Starting the car, I stared at the flickering city lights, mind swirling with memories of her eyes, her laugh, the twinsâ soft coos. I resigned from the hospital, made amends with Leoâsort of. That left meâ¦nowhere, standing at the edge of an unknown future.
But for the first time in ages, I felt a strange clarity. Iâd learned the hard way that life was too short, that burying guilt in ambition only led to missed chances. If Ella left to spare me from scandal or to chase her own dreams, I couldnât fix it by lingering here.
If fate was kind, maybe itâd lead me back to her someday.
I let the tears slip down my cheeks as I drove into the night, mind on Ella and the twins. My heart ached, but I wasnât broken. Leo had called me Dad. That was worth something.
No. It was worth everything. That little word was a stepping stone on a new path. I had no idea where it would lead me, but it was a first step nonetheless.