![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
The child is a boy, just as Serena told George from the start, small but stubborn as his mother and determined to live.
She names him for his father – the father he's unlikely to ever meet – and gives him her maiden name as his middle. She figures it's the last chance she has for her family's name to live on, long after the rest of them were lost to her.
A week or so after she delivers him she's told she can leave the hospital but he's not ready, yet, and that's a reality she doesn't easily accept. If she were back in North Carolina instead of this strange, forward place, she might have more sway in bringing him back to the apartment that she's been assigned, but neither the doctors nor nurses will hear any of it.
So she leaves the hospital without her son – a day after Mother's Day, of all days – watching him through glass before she heads on. She'll be back in the evening, she tells them, although once she's outside she's not sure where she'll find the strength. She has two scars, now. The one burned in her back and one on her belly, each telling a story of survival against all odds.
Nothing to her name except a few clothes the nurses had given her and an envelope that has cash, a key and the strangest phone she's ever seen, she lingers outside the hospital for a few minutes before asking for help hailing a cab. Someone tells her it's 2017 (a fact she's still struggling to believe) and to use something called an app.
For the first time since she was a young girl, covered in ash, Serena feels totally at a loss.
no subject
Date: 2017-05-17 04:01 pm (UTC)She speaks with the assumption that she will, because she was there on that first day, she was the one to help Serena and Beth has a tendency to take to the people she helps in Darrow, to want to be there with them no matter what they go through. The idea of helping someone and then just drifting away without the slightest interest in how they're doing is an impossible one as far as Beth is concerned.
"Are you headin' to your new place?" she asks curiously. "If you want, I can help you find it."
no subject
Date: 2017-05-18 01:23 pm (UTC)It's still something Serena's coming to terms with. She knows that there were people who worried about the outcome of Serena's pregnancy back on the timber camp, but this feels different. Beth doesn't seem to fear her. Beth doesn't seem intimidated by her. Beth might even like her.
"I could use the help, if you've got the time. I don't even know how to use the phones here."
no subject
Date: 2017-05-18 07:57 pm (UTC)"Sure," Beth agrees with a smile. It's why she'd come, after all, to visit Serena and to give her a hand if she can. "You got your phone, though, right? In your package? I can show you how to use that, too, if you want. I had to get used to 'em, too, we didn't really have anything like it back home either. What building did they put you in?"
no subject
Date: 2017-05-19 01:10 pm (UTC)"A nurse tried to show me how to use it to take some pictures of the baby but I don't remember the half of it," she admits, digging for the phone and passing it over to Beth. There's nothing on there but the number for emergencies, the number to call if she needs to speak to her midwife and then two or three shaky photos of George in her arms, both of their eyes closed.
no subject
Date: 2017-05-19 09:50 pm (UTC)"C'mon, we'll get a cab and-" Beth cuts herself off, throwing her arm up and giving a wave so one of the nearby taxis turns in their direction, but she's not speaking anymore because she's looking at the phone in her hand, at the slightly blurred photos of Serena and her new baby, and Beth would swear her heart is just melting.
"He's perfect," she says, smiling down at the pictures just as the cab pulls up beside them. "Wow, Serena, he's adorable."
no subject
Date: 2017-05-20 06:15 am (UTC)It feels strange and wrong to be heading in the opposite direction of her son. Almost like she's failed him, even if she has no other choice. Even if she plans to return the first opportunity she can.
Sliding into the cab first, she puts her bags at her feet. "I can't wait to bring him home. I have so much I need to buy."
no subject
Date: 2017-05-20 05:15 pm (UTC)They have some stuff from Judith, stuff she's sure Carl won't mind parting with if someone else might get some use out of it.
"We might have some stuff you can use," she says. "Judith is pretty big now, so she's grown out of a lot of her clothes and she doesn't need all her baby stuff anymore."
no subject
Date: 2017-05-21 02:13 pm (UTC)That she can't simply nurse has complicated things in a way that she wasn't prepared for. Not that she was prepared for any of this. Even back in the camp, she was supposed to have weeks before the baby was born. "I wish I had his bassinet from back home. I can't imagine finding anything like it here."
no subject
Date: 2017-05-22 11:20 pm (UTC)It might. But Beth figures, at least in this case, it's better to be pleasantly surprised than disappointed.
"Was it passed down through your family?" she asks. "We had some stuff like that when we were little. Stuff my grandparents had kept and then gave my mom when my older brother Shawn was born."
no subject
Date: 2017-05-23 09:52 am (UTC)She can't say whether George looks like her when she was an infant, because there's nothing left from when she was born at all. If not for her memories of her family, they might as well have never lived. "My husband's. He had it imported. It was very... special. He was very excited to have a son."
She says nothing about the fact it would be his second. The law didn't acknowledge a child born out of wedlock and nor will she.
no subject
Date: 2017-05-24 07:34 pm (UTC)"I know it's not the same, but I'm happy to help you look for some things," she offers as the cab pulls up to the apartment building. Beth doesn't always have a lot of money to spare, but she pays the driver without question, then opens the door to help Serena out. "There's a lot of stuff here, too, that you'll be able to buy that might not make sense. I can help you figure it out. I mean, some of it anyway."
She has no idea how to work a breast pump.
no subject
Date: 2017-05-25 04:04 am (UTC)Reluctant as they might have been. Nobody got rich by giving away their riches, after all.
"They gave me some things," she says. "Enough for a few days. Some... they called it formula. My milk never came in."
It shouldn't bother her but it does, another thing she has to deny her son.
no subject
Date: 2017-05-25 04:33 pm (UTC)"The formula will be good for him," she says. "The stuff they make now is full of all kinds of nutrients, he'll be gettin' everything he needs. I can show you where to get more and we can look up baby stores so I can help you find the closest one."
The internet isn't going to be familiar to her, after all, but Beth is happy to help wherever she can.