"His team contacted us first," he says carefully. "Mr. Sinclair was already aware of the situation before we reached out to you this morning."
I let that sit for exactly three seconds.
"So he knew before I did," I say. "About my body. About my pregnancy. He knew first."
"Ms. Navarro-"
"I'm going to need a minute." I stand up. My legs are steady, which surprises me. "Where's your bathroom?"
He points. I walk to it without looking at Dominic Sinclair. I close the bathroom door, run cold water over my wrists, and stare at myself in the mirror above the sink.
The woman looking back at me has dark circles she covered badly this morning and hair she twisted up in forty seconds and a expression that is working very hard at neutral. I know this woman. I've seen her in worse moments than this. The night her mother stopped breathing. The morning she read those texts. The afternoon she sat alone in a hospital waiting room at nineteen and signed forms she didn't fully understand because there was no one else to sign them.
She is still standing. She always is.
"Okay," I tell her quietly. "Okay."
I dry my hands and go back out.
Dominic Sinclair has taken my chair.
Not deliberately, I think. He's pulled a second chair around and he's sitting with his forearms on his knees, leaning forward slightly, and the position should look casual but on him it just looks like barely contained forward momentum. Like a man who is very used to moving and has decided, for now, to be still.
He looks up when I walk in. I take the remaining chair, angle it so we're not quite facing each other, and sit.
"I'd like to hear your understanding of the situation," I say to Dr. Maddox.
He explains it again, more carefully this time. The error happened during a routine sample swap between storage units three weeks before my procedure. Two vials were mislabeled. The audit caught it too late. The clinic's legal team has been notified. There will be a full internal review.
I listen. I don't interrupt. Interrupting right now would cost me energy I need for other things.
When he finishes, Dominic speaks for the first time since entering the room.
"The child is mine." His voice is low and even, the kind of voice that expects to be heard without raising itself. "I want that established clearly, before anything else is discussed."
I look at him.
Up close he is even more unsettling than he was in the doorway. Not because he's threatening exactly, but because he has the quality of something that doesn't need to threaten. Still waters that you somehow know go down very, very far.
"The child," I say, "is inside my body."
"Yes."
"So perhaps the first thing that should be established is that I'm in this room."
Something shifts in his expression. It's small, barely visible, but I catch it because I've spent six years reading faces in emergency rooms where people are too scared or too proud to say what's actually wrong with them. It isn't irritation. It's closer to recalibration.
"I'm aware of that, Ms. Navarro," he says.
"Good. Then you're also aware that decisions about my pregnancy aren't made in rooms I'm not in."
Dr. Maddox makes a small, pained sound.
Dominic Sinclair holds my gaze for a moment. "Fair," he says.
I didn't expect that. I keep my face from showing it.
The next forty minutes are the most surreal of my life, and I once worked a twelve-hour shift on New Year's Eve in a Chicago ER, so that's saying something.
Dr. Maddox walks us through the clinic's proposed next steps. Genetic confirmation, which is apparently already in process on Dominic's end. Legal mediation. A counselor they have on retainer for situations like this, which makes me wonder darkly how many situations like this they've had.
I ask questions because asking questions is the only thing keeping me from the feeling that is building behind my sternum like water against a cracked wall. I ask about the timeline of the error. I ask about the other mislabeled vial. I ask what happened to the donor I actually selected and whether he's been notified.
Dominic watches me ask these questions with an attention that I feel on the side of my face like a light source.
When there is a pause, he says, "What do you want to do?"
I look at him. "What?"
"About the pregnancy. What do you want to do?"
The question is so direct and so unexpected that for a second I just stare at him. After an hour of legal language and procedural framing, someone is asking me what I actually want, and the someone is the last person I expected it from.
"I want my baby," I say. The words come out before I can shape them into something more composed. Raw, simple and entirely true. "That hasn't changed."
He nods once. Like that settles something.
"Then we'll figure out the rest," he says.
I don't know what the rest means. I don't know what figure out looks like when it involves a man like this. But I note, somewhere in the back of my mind, that he said "we", and I don't correct him, and I probably should have.
He walks out ahead of me when the meeting ends. His phone is already at his ear before he clears the door, and I hear two words before he moves out of range.
"She's keeping it."
I stop walking.
He wasn't asking me what I wanted.
He was reporting back to someone who already needed to know.
My hand moves without thinking to my stomach, and I stand in the middle of that clinic hallway with the cold coming back, harder this time, spreading all the way up to my throat.
Because whoever is on the other end of that call, this was never just about a mistake.
Someone has been waiting for my answer.