Authors: Emily Giffin
They both nod and smile, and Gabe says, “Awkward.”
“It's not awkward,” I say. “I'm just happy you like each other. That's all.”
“If you're happy,
we're
happy, right, Pete?” Gabe says.
“Oh, she's one of those?” Pete asks, his brows raised. “If she ain't happy, nobody's happy?”
“Oh, yeah,” Gabe says, nodding. “She's
totally
one of those.”
“No, I'm not,” I protest, even though I know I kind of am.
At this point, I catch Leslie giving me a critical once-over. Maybe it's in my head, but I have the feeling that it's hard for her when I'm the center of attentionâat least Gabe's attentionâand I suddenly feel just a tad self-conscious. So I change the subject, open our junk drawer, pull out a deck of cards, and give it a shuffle. “Y'all wanna play Hearts?” I ask, looking up at Pete first.
“Sure,” he says. “But I should warn youâI'm
really
good.”
“Counting-cards, shoot-the-moon good?” I ask him.
“Yes,” he says, holding my gaze. “That good.” He then turns to Gabe and says, “She just wants to test my intelligence. The other night she actually quizzed me at the dinner table. With
brain teasers
.”
“Well?” I say. “I want a smart kid.”
“Yeah,” Gabe says. “She wants to raise the gene pool.”
“I resemble that,” I say, an old joke between us.
Gabe chuckles and says, “Yeah, I know. That's the problem. You
do
resemble that.”
I punch him, then turn to ask Leslie if she plays cards. “Other than Uno?”
She hesitates, folding her arms across her flat chest, then says, “A little. But I've never played Hearts.”
“We can teach you,” I say.
“If you want⦔ Leslie says, glancing at Gabe, as if transmitting a private message.
“Nah. I'm not in the mood for cards. Let's just talk,” he says, deftly interpreting her look to mean that
she's
not in the mood for cards.
“Okay,” I say with a shrug. “It was just a suggestion.”
Gabe clears his throat and says, “Maybe we should order the pizza now?”
“Sure,” I say, grabbing my phone. “I'll call Blue Moon. What does everyone like? Sausage and mushroom?” I look at Pete, fondly remembering the flatbread from our first date.
“Sounds good to me,” he says.
“Leslie's a vegetarian,” Gabe says.
“You are, huh?” I say, giving her a closed-lipped smile.
“Yes,” she says, raising her chin a few centimeters.
Here we go,
I think, then toss her a softball she can hit from her soapbox. “Because of health or animal rights?”
“Both,” she says.
“Hmm. Then do I have the sperm donor for you,” I say, thinking of Glenn S, the animal rights activist. “If you ever end up needing one.”
She smiles her smug twenty-something smile, then says, “Thanks. But hopefully that won't be necessary.”
L
ATER THAT NIGHT,
after our two pizzas arrive (one sausage and mushroom, the other gluten-free veggie) and Gabe, Pete, and I all eat three slices, and Leslie eats one, minus the crust, I find myself wondering what my beef with her is (vegetarian pun intended). Am I just jealous of her fresh, unlined face and raging fertility? Or feeling territorial over Gabe, selfishly clinging to our status quo, wanting to keep my best friend all to myself, especially as I embark on an overwhelming, downright scary endeavor?
As the evening wears on, I have the feeling it has more to do with Leslie herselfâsomething I can't quite pinpoint, but that I just don't like about her. It's nothing she says or does; it's more what she
doesn't
say or do. She answers all my questions to her, whether how many siblings she has (one sister) or where she studied undergrad (Tufts) or where she grew up (Alexandria, Virginia), but never asks a single question of her own. Instead she just sits there, emitting her smug, artsy vibe. To be fair, maybe Gabe's already told her all about me. But I don't think that lets her entirely off the hook.
“So,” Gabe says at one point after I make another reference to sperm donors. “Are you two really serious about this thing?”
I look at Pete, and he looks at me, then smiles. I smile back at him and say, “I am.”
“I am, too,” Pete says. “But it's up to Josie. I'm sure she can find better.”
My smile grows wider, thinking that his response is generous but humble.
“So how would this work?” Gabe asks. “I meanânot mechanically speakingâ¦but, you know, how would the whole
thing
work?”
“We haven't really gotten that far,” Pete replies. “But that would be up to Josie, too.”
“So
everything's
up to Josie?” Gabe asks with a measure of skepticism, suddenly sounding like a father interviewing a new boyfriend.
I hold my breath, awaiting Pete's reply, realizing how much I want him to pass the test.
“I'm not going to say
everything's
up to her,” he says.
Gabe raises an eyebrow, and I half expect him to exclaim
aha!
But instead he waits as Pete crosses his legs, looking contemplative, then continues, “I guess what I'm saying isâ¦I'm not offering her
everything
. Justâ¦my sperm.” He lets out a nervous laugh.
Gabe doesn't smile back, but I can't tell if he's disapproving or just worried. “So notâ¦financial support, for example?”
“Correct,” Pete says. “Though I might help out here and there. I really don't knowâ¦.We haven't figured the whole thing outâ¦but it wouldn't be traditional. I wouldn't be the baby's
father
â¦.”
“You wouldn't?” Gabe says.
“I mean, I
would
be the biological fatherâ¦but not the
father
father.”
“So what if she got pregnantâthen never wanted to see you again?”
“We talked about thatâ¦.”
“And?”
“And I'd understand.”
Gabe stares at him for a few seconds, then says, “So what's in it for you?”
“Does something have to be in it for me?”
“I guess not.” Gabe shrugs. “But people usually act in their self-interest.”
“Yes. But not alwaysâ¦Don't you give blood?”
“Blood and sperm are kind of different, don't you think?” Gabe asks.
I interject, feeling defensive of Pete. “Gabe. You argued the opposite just a few weeks ago. You compared this to organ donation. Remember?”
“Yeah,” Gabe fires back. “And
you
said it wasn't the same at all. Remember?”
I start to answer, and he keeps going. “Besides. This isn't about what I think. It's about what Pete thinks. I'm trying to understand how
he
feels.” Gabe swallows, still looking tense as he turns back to Pete. “So. Describe your ideal scenario.”
“My ideal scenario⦔ Pete starts, then stops. “Let's seeâ¦my ideal scenarioâ”
“You're putting him on the spot,” I say, half expecting Pete to get up and walk out. Why should he put up with an interrogation?
Pete shakes his head and says, “No, he's fine. I'm just thinking.” He tries again. “My ideal scenario is that I donate my spermâ¦and Josie gets pregnantâ¦and then gives birth to a beautiful, healthy babyâ¦.
Her
childâ¦but⦔
“But what?” Gabe says, pouncing.
“But maybe she'd allow me to be involved in some limited way.”
“Define
limited,
” Gabe says.
“I don't know. A once-a-year outing. Maybe an annual Braves gameâ”
“You're a Braves fan?” Gabe asks, as if this is pertinent.
“No. Brewers. But since I'm assuming road trips are out of the question, I'd settle for the Braves.” Pete smiles.
“And what if you took your kid to that Braves gameâ¦and got attached?” Gabe fires back.
“I'm sure I probably would,” Pete says.
“And? You don't see that as a problem?”
“Gabe,” I say, finally getting a little angry. “Why are you trying to talk him out of helping me?”
“I'm not,” he snaps back.
“It's fine,” Pete says calmly. “It's actually helpful. Go on.”
“Okay,” Gabe says, nodding, then taking a deep breath. “Well, I did a little research.”
I shoot him a pointed look, wondering why he didn't tell me about his research first.
“And even if you have a legal document in place, courts can sometimes overturn them. Which means”âhe pauses dramaticallyâ“there's a possibility that Josie could sue you for child support.” Gabe points to me but continues to stare at Pete. “And there's a chance you could sue
her
for paternity. Even joint custody.” He gives me a hard look now.
“I wouldn't do that,” I say, borderline pissed now.
“Neither would I,” Pete says.
“But you both
could,
” Gabe says. “It happens. It's a risk.”
“Not if we used a licensed doctor,” Pete retorts. “In those cases, agreements are almost always upheld.”
I look at him, surprised, and he gives me a slight but adorable smile. “I did some research, too.”
I smile back at him, touched. “You
did
?”
“I did,” he says, nodding.
For a few seconds, I forget that Gabe and Leslie are in the room until Gabe clears his throat and begins his closing argument. “Look, guys,” he says. “I have to be honest hereâI just don't think this is a good idea. At all.”
“Well, I do,” Leslie suddenly chimes in, completely unexpectedly.
Everyone stares at her as she continues, “Josie wants a baby. And Pete wants to help her. So why not?”
Her words are nice enough, but her body language, tone, and entire demeanor are loaded. She shifts on the sofa, drops her head to Gabe's shoulder, then yawns wearily, clearly ready for this portion of the evening to end.
Pete ignores her, directing his reply to Gabe. “We obviously have to give it some more thought. There's a lot to discuss. And we'd have to talk to professionals in this field. A doctor
and
probably a lawyer.” His voice is steady, strong, reasonable. “Most likely, I think I would donate, then disappear. That would probably be best for everyone involved.”
I feel a wave of disappointment before he adds a
but.
I wait, feeling hopeful, though not sure what
for
.
“But Josie and I can make our own rules,” he says, meeting my eyes with a tenderness that makes me catch my breath. “Right, Josie?”
“Right, Pete,” I say with a big smile, feeling almost as lucky as a girl in love.
T
HE FOLLOWING MORNING,
while I'm still in bed scrolling through my Instagram, Gabe returns home from Leslie's and knocks on my door.
“Come in,” I say, putting my phone down and sitting up.
He opens the door, looking disheveled and tired, but extremely animated.
“It's a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad idea,” he says, referencing my favorite children's book, which I keep on my nightstand, along with
Harold and the Purple Crayon
and
The Five Chinese Brothers
.
I play dumb and calmly reply, “What is?”
“This thing with Pete. It's a complete and utter disaster waiting to happen.” He glances around my room, looking suspicious, then says, “Did he spend the night?”
“No!” I say, sounding aghast. “Of course not.”
“Uh-
huh,
” he says, crossing his arms.
“He
didn't
!” I say. “God. What's your deal?”
“It's a disaster,” he says again.
“You don't like him?” I say.
“I
like
him just fine,” he says, sitting on the foot of my bed. “But this is truly one of your all-time worst ideas.”
“Why do you say that?” I ask.
“Because it is,” he says, then starts to enumerate all the things that could go wrong, several rehashed from last night. He could get too attached and sue for partial custody. My husband could resent him. His wife could despise me. I could end up with my kid's half siblings living in town. I finally interrupt him, during a completely far-fetched hypothetical about my daughter being torn over who should give her away at her wedding. “She can't decide between her sperm donor father and the man you marriedâ¦.”
“But
I'm
not even marriedâand you're already marrying
my daughter
off?” I say. And then, before he can get started again, I add, “There are always risks in relationships. Look at you and Leslie. You could have knocked her up last night. Then what?”
“First of all, I actually
couldn't
have knocked her up last night. Because we didn't have sex.”
“Yeah, right,” I say, thinking of that gross
hmmm
sound he made when he kissed her. “You guys never stopped touching each other all evening.”
“Well. If you must know, we got in our first fight last night.”
“I'm sorry to hear that,” I say, resisting the urge to ask him about it. Then I say, “But at some point, you
could
end up getting her pregnantâor just marrying herâand then realizing that she completely
sucks
.” I say the last word with as much fire as I can muster.
“That's totally different,” he says as I notice dark circles under his eyes and a massive underground zit emerging on his forehead. “And you know it.”
“Well,
every
situation is different,” I say.
“Yes,” he says. “And this one is way,
waaay
too messy and complicated and fraught with dangers and pitfalls. If I got just one veto in your life, this would be it.”