©Novel Buddy
My Seven Wives Are Beautiful Saintesses-Chapter 243 - 242: The Beginning Of A New Era
The night he was born, the city did not slow down.
Sirens wailed somewhere in the distance. A train rattled across old tracks, its metal screech echoing through blocks of worn buildings. Streetlights flickered over cracked sidewalks, and somewhere below, voices argued in a language shaped by fatigue and survival.
Y City never truly rested. Not in this part of it.
Rain fell in thin sheets, turning the pavement slick and reflective, neon signs bleeding into puddles like melted color. The hospital stood at the edge of the district, a tired building with aging walls and fluorescent lights that hummed faintly overhead. Inside, the air smelled of antiseptic and long hours.
Daniel Hayes paced outside the delivery room.
His boots were still dusted with dried cement. His jeans were worn at the knees, his jacket hanging loosely from his shoulders, damp from the rain he had rushed through to get here. His hands were rough, fingers scarred and callused from years of construction work. He had not gone home. He had come straight from the site. Now he walked back and forth, again and again, as if motion alone could keep everything from going wrong.
A nurse passing by slowed slightly.
"First time?" she asked.
Daniel nodded quickly. "Yeah."
She gave a small smile. "You’ll be fine."
He almost laughed. "I’m not the one doing the hard part," he said.
The nurse chuckled and moved on. Daniel stopped pacing for a moment, leaning his back against the wall and staring at the closed door.
Inside, Emily fought through the final stretch. Her hair clung to her face, her breath uneven, her body trembling under the strain. Pain came in waves, each one sharper than the last, leaving her barely enough space to think between them.
"Stay with me," the doctor said calmly. "You’re doing great."
Emily wanted to laugh. Great was not the word she would have chosen.
Another contraction hit. She cried out, gripping the side of the bed. Her mind drifted, not away from the pain, but through it. She thought of the apartment. She thought of Daniel, who woke up before sunrise every day and came home long after the sun had disappeared. She thought of bills stacked on a small table and meals stretched just enough to last. She thought of the child who was about to be born into all of that.
"I’m sorry," she whispered, her voice barely audible.
Then the moment came. The final push. The room shifted.
Then came a cry. Sharp. Alive. Real.
Emily’s head fell back against the pillow, breath leaving her in a rush as the sound filled the room. For a few seconds, she just listened. Then she laughed, soft and relieved.
Outside, Daniel froze. The sound reached him through the door. Everything else faded. The hallway, the noise, the city; it was all gone.
The door opened. A nurse stepped out, smiling. "Congratulations," she said. "You’ve got a son."
Daniel stared at her for a second, the words taking time to settle. A son. His chest tightened.
"Can I see him?" he asked.
"Of course."
He stepped inside slowly. The room felt smaller than he expected, or maybe it was just that everything else had become too large. Emily lay on the bed, exhausted but smiling, her eyes brighter than he had ever seen them. In her arms was a baby, wrapped and small.
Daniel approached carefully, as if any sudden movement might break the moment.
"Hey," Emily said softly. "You made it."
"I wasn’t missing this," he replied, his voice rough.
He looked down. The baby shifted slightly, then opened his eyes. Daniel blinked. He had expected something else, perhaps blurred movement or an unfocused gaze. Instead, the child looked straight at him. He wasn’t searching or confused. He was just looking.
Daniel felt something strange in his chest. A pause. It felt like time had slowed for a fraction of a second. Then the baby blinked, and the feeling was gone. Daniel let out a breath he didn’t realize he had been holding.
"He’s looking at you," Emily said.
"Yeah," Daniel replied quietly. "He is."
She adjusted slightly, offering the baby toward him. "Hold him."
Daniel shook his head instinctively. "I don’t want to mess it up."
"You won’t," she said.
He hesitated, then carefully and awkwardly, he took the child into his arms. The weight surprised him. It wasn’t because it was heavy, but because it wasn’t. After years of lifting concrete, steel, and tools that wore down muscle and bone, this felt like nothing. And yet, it felt like everything.
The baby’s small hand moved, resting lightly against his shirt. Daniel swallowed.
"Hey, little guy," he murmured.
Emily watched them, a soft smile forming. "What should we call him?" she asked.
Daniel exhaled slowly. "I was thinking about that," he said.
"Oh?" she teased faintly. "You didn’t tell me."
"I wanted to make sure," he replied.
She raised an eyebrow. "Let’s hear it."
Daniel looked down at the child, then back at her. "Evan," he said.
Emily repeated it quietly. "Evan..."
It fit. It was simple, strong, and real. She nodded. "I like it," she said.
Daniel smiled faintly. "Evan Hayes," he said.
The baby shifted again, eyes closing this time. And just like that, he had a name.
Days turned into weeks. Y City moved on, as it always did. Construction sites reopened at dawn. Traffic filled the streets. Voices echoed through narrow hallways and thin apartment walls. And in a small, one bedroom unit on the third floor of a worn building, life began to settle.
The apartment was small. The paint peeled in places. The heater worked when it wanted to, and the window let in more noise than silence. But it was home.
Emily adjusted quickly, despite the exhaustion. Late nights turned into early mornings. Sleep came in fragments. Still, she smiled more. Daniel worked longer hours, sometimes two sites in one day. His hands ached and his back protested, but when he came home and saw Evan, something in him eased every time.
"Hey, champ," he would say, setting down his tools.
Evan would respond with small sounds, arms moving and eyes tracking. Everything was normal. Evan cried when he was hungry. He slept in uneven cycles. He gripped Daniel’s finger with surprising strength.
Emily laughed often. "He’s got your grip," she said.
Daniel chuckled. "Hope he gets your patience instead."
Time moved slowly and steadily. Evan grew. Three months passed, then four, then five. Nothing seemed out of place until one evening.
Rain tapped lightly against the window, softer than the night he was born. The apartment was quiet. Emily sat on the bed, folding clothes. Daniel had not returned yet. Evan lay nearby, awake, staring up at the ceiling. It wasn’t unusual. He liked to watch. He was always watching.
Emily smiled faintly. "What are you looking at, huh?"
Evan blinked. His small hand lifted slightly. Then, the hanging cord of the old ceiling fan moved just a little.
Emily paused. She frowned, glancing at the window. It was closed. There was no wind. The fan itself was off. She looked back, and the cord stilled.
"...Weird," she murmured.
Evan’s eyes remained fixed upward, calm and quiet.
Emily shook her head lightly, brushing it off. "Probably nothing," she said under her breath.
And maybe it was. Or maybe it was the first time something moved without being touched. Evan blinked slowly. Somewhere, deep beneath memory that did not yet exist, something stirred. It wasn’t a thought or a name. It was just a quiet, distant echo.
Then it faded. The night continued, unaware and unchanged, yet already beginning to shift.







