Not the ordinary background hum of needing to eat, she'd been a nurse long enough to operate through ordinary hunger without noticing it, but something more urgent. More animal. Cravings that arrived suddenly and completely, that didn't feel like preferences so much as instructions. She'd eaten half a jar of peanut butter at eleven o'clock the previous morning standing at the kitchen counter without plates or cutlery because the thought of waiting long enough to make an actual sandwich had seemed genuinely impossible.
She had not catalogued that as a symptom until right now, watching Mrs. Patel stir the khichdi with a spoon and feeling her hands curl and flex at her sides with wanting.
You'll experience rapid changes.
"Sit down, Maya."
She sat down at the small kitchen table, tucking her feet up under herself and pulling the cardigan tighter. The clock above the stove read 2:49. Through the kitchen window, the city was doing what the city did at this hour, not sleeping exactly, never fully sleeping, just dimming to something lower and more honest than its daytime self. The orange glow of the streetlights. The occasional sweep of headlights across the wall.
She had lived in this apartment for four years. She had eaten at this table alone more nights than she could count, because James had his own apartment across town that he preferred, that she had paid the rent on for the last two years. She had sat at this exact table and told herself that she didn't mind eating alone, that it was fine, that not everyone needed company for every meal, that she was a person who valued her solitude.
She was very tired of things she had told herself that weren't true.
The microwave beeped. Mrs. Patel brought the bowl to the table and set it in front of Maya with a spoon and a square of folded paper towel. Then she pulled out the chair across from her and sat down with the naturalness of someone who has decided that sitting down is simply what you do next.
Maya looked at the bowl. The steam rose from it in soft curls. She picked up the spoon.
"You didn't sleep," Mrs. Patel said. It was not a question.
"Not much."
"How many nights?"
Maya considered lying. Looked at Mrs. Patel's face. Set the spoon down briefly. "Four," she said. "Maybe five."
Mrs. Patel made a sound that was not quite a word, a low hm of acknowledgment that managed to convey both understanding and gentle reproach without committing to either. "The body needs sleep, beta. Whatever is happening, it cannot be faced on no sleep."
"I know." Maya picked up the spoon again. "I know that. I tell patients that approximately four times a shift."
"And do they listen?"
"Almost never."
"Mm." Mrs. Patel folded her hands on the table. "Then you understand how I feel right now."
Maya almost smiled. It surprised her, the almost-smile arriving without her permission like a small unexpected animal, quick and gone. She took a spoonful of the khichdi and the warmth of it spread through her immediately, more than temperature, something more fundamental than that, and she had to close her eyes for a moment against the unexpected intensity of it.
Every sensation was too much. She understood that now, sitting at her own kitchen table at nearly three in the morning, eating her neighbor's rice and trying to take stock of herself the way she would take stock of a patient. Cataloguing symptoms with the methodical care she'd been trained toward.
Heightened hearing. Confirmed.
Heightened smell — the khichdi's ghee and spice reaching her from across the room before the microwave had finished, rich and specific and overwhelming in a way she'd put down to hunger. Possibly confirmed.
Hunger itself, sharp and urgent beyond normal parameters. Confirmed.
The dreams. The vivid, physical dreams of running through forests, the moonlight on grass, the sensation of the ground under four legs instead of two. She'd been having them since the second night after the hotel. She hadn't let herself think too carefully about what they meant. She was thinking about it now, the spoon warm in her hand and the steam rising, and the thinking felt unavoidable in a way it hadn't in the daylight hours when there was enough distraction to hold it at bay.
"Something happened," Mrs. Patel said quietly. Not prying. Just naming the obvious thing in the room, the way she might name a piece of furniture they'd both been navigating around in the dark.
Maya looked at her hands.
"Yes," she said.
"With James?"
The name landed differently than it had yesterday. Less like a wound and more like scar tissue — still tender when pressed, but the acute bleeding had stopped. She recognized that as a small mercy, and also as the particular mercy of having something larger and stranger to contain than ordinary heartbreak.
"With James," she confirmed. "And other things."
Mrs. Patel waited. She was extraordinarily good at waiting. Maya had noticed this over three years of adjacent living, the way the older woman could sit in silence without filling it, could let a pause breathe without rushing to smother it with words.
"I can't tell you the other things," Maya said carefully. "I know that sounds..."
"It sounds like you have things that are yours to carry for now," Mrs. Patel said simply. "That's allowed."
Maya looked up at her.
"You think I've told my children everything?" Mrs. Patel raised her eyebrows slightly. "There are rooms in every person that belong only to them. You don't owe me your whole story, Maya. You just have to make sure you're not trying to carry it completely alone." She tilted her head. "Are you safe?"
The question was direct and without drama, asked the way one adult asks another when they've decided that the conversation has earned its way to the honest question.
Maya thought about werewolves. About a doctor with kind eyes telling her to keep the pregnancy quiet because there were people who would pay for an Alpha pup. About the howling sound that came from her own stomach and the nightmare hands at her throat and the six days — no, five now, probably four and a half, before the full moon that apparently meant something she didn't fully understand yet.
"I don't know," she said. Which was, she decided, the most honest answer available to her.
Mrs. Patel absorbed this without alarm. Something shifted in her expression, not worry exactly, but a deepening of attention, a recalibration.
"Is there someone?" she asked. "Someone who knows what's happening? Someone looking out for you?"
Maya thought about Kai. The man she didn't know. The man whose name she'd only learned two days ago from a pregnancy diagnosis that shouldn't have been possible. The man who had held her face in his hands in a darkened hotel room and called her beautiful like he meant it.
She had no idea if he was looking for her. She had no idea what she was to him. She had no idea what any of this was.
"I think so," she said. "Maybe."
Mrs. Patel looked at her for a long moment, reading her face the way she always read faces, that quiet penetrating assessment that never felt intrusive because it was accompanied by such obvious goodwill.
"Eat your khichdi," she said finally.
Maya ate.
They sat together in the kitchen while the city dimmed around them, the clock moving from 2:49 to 3:12 without either of them marking it. Mrs. Patel talked about her daughter's new apartment in Seattle, about the temple renovation fundraiser, about the neighbor on the third floor who had gotten a new dog that barked on Tuesdays for reasons no one could determine. Small things. Ordinary things. The building-blocks of a life that continued to be lived.
Maya listened. She let the ordinary sounds of it wash over her, the warmth of the bowl in her hands, the smell of the ghee, the familiar cadence of her neighbor's voice, and she felt something in her chest unclench by increments. Not resolved. Not better. But fractionally, carefully looser.
The baby moved.
Not the howl, not the urgent animal demand she'd felt before. Something quieter this time. A soft and rhythmic nudging, as if testing, as if asking. Maya's hand moved to her stomach before she could think about it, pressing gently through the fabric of her cardigan.
Hello, she thought at it, absurdly, with the part of herself that was still a nurse and understood that talking to patients who couldn't respond was not weakness but acknowledgment.
The nudging continued, steady as a second heartbeat.
Mrs. Patel's voice didn't pause. She was talking about the Seattle apartment now, about her daughter's new furniture. But Maya noticed, without looking up, that the older woman's gaze had dropped briefly to where Maya's hand rested against her abdomen.
When Maya looked up, Mrs. Patel was looking at the window.
Her expression was entirely neutral.
Maya lowered her hand.
Neither of them said anything about it.
At 3:24, Mrs. Patel stood and collected the empty bowl with the easy efficiency of someone for whom feeding people was a primary language, rinsed it at the sink and set it in the drying rack, and folded her hands once in the manner of someone concluding a meeting.
"Try to sleep," she said. "Real sleep. Not the fighting kind."
"I'll try."
"If you need something—" Mrs. Patel gestured vaguely toward the shared wall between their apartments, a gesture that managed to contain an entire library of neighbor-meaning. I'm there. I'm awake. I don't ask for much in return. "You know."
"I know," Maya said. "Thank you, Mrs. Patel."
"Priya," the older woman said, as she had said approximately once a month for three years. "We've been neighbors long enough, Maya. Priya."
"Thank you, Priya."
The older woman smiled — brief, genuine, the smile of someone satisfied that the necessary thing had been done, and let herself out. The door clicked shut behind her with a sound that no longer hit Maya like a stone in still water.
She sat for a moment in the quiet kitchen.
Then she got up and went to the window. Pressed her palm flat against the cool glass and looked out at the city, at the streetlights and the parked cars and the absolute ordinary continuity of a world that didn't know it had shifted on its axis.
Her hearing was different. She stood there and let herself fully accept that, the acceptance arriving without drama because she was too tired for drama and because it was simply, clinically, true. She could hear the building breathe around her, the elevator settling, the Garcias' television murmuring three floors below, a cab passing on the street, the specific individual footfall of someone crossing the lobby. Details that would have been inaudible two days ago. Details that were now simply present, clear as a nurse's notes, waiting to be charted.
Her body was changing.
She was pregnant with something she had no medical framework for. She was in a world that had revealed itself to be larger and stranger and more dangerous than any of the frameworks she'd built for herself over twenty-six years of careful, competent, systematic living.
And in four or five days there was apparently a full moon that meant something.
She pressed her forehead against the cool glass.
"Okay," she said quietly, to the city, to herself, to the thing nudging gently against her palm from the inside.
She didn't say it with confidence. She said it with the specific commitment of a woman who had been broken and had gotten up anyway.