Secret Regrets (Living For Today #2) (19 page)

BOOK: Secret Regrets (Living For Today #2)
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I could feel the moisture in the air as the wind picked up, and I quickly said my goodbyes to Angelica and hustled to my car. I jumped into my driver’s seat just as the first raindrops splatted onto the windshield.

Checking my phone, I saw a text from Bryant telling me his mom was at the house and Leslie would be there soon. We were making the announcement today after holding onto it for so long. I had needed time to process, to release the fear of the past repeating itself and just experience the calm of life with no craziness to it. Unfortunately for my nerves, the drive was short, and before I knew it, I was turning the key in the ignition and quieting the rumble of the motor.

Our front door opened and the man I adored, the father of my children, was standing there in his snug cotton tee and denim jeans, each piece of material taunt against his muscles, making my eyes lust in appreciation. I met his smiling gaze as he welcomed me home.

“Hey, beautiful,” he crooned as I got closer, taking my hand and pulling me into his body with a thud.

He nuzzled my neck, and my skin covered in goose bumps, every part of me wanting to connect with him, love him, and worship him.

“Did you have a good visit with our baby girl?” he asked, releasing me and leading me toward the living room, where I guessed Eleanor and Walter waited for us.

“I did,” I said quietly, not wanting to get into it in front of the enemy.

“Hi, Rose. How are you?” Eleanor spoke with a genuine smile on her face.

It was disarming and so unlike her. I could feel my guard being raised, knowing who I was dealing with. She didn’t do nice and genuine.

“Hello, Eleanor,” I responded curtly.

My in-laws had been calling relentlessly since the charges had been dropped and had just come for another visit,
“wanting to talk.”
Yeah, I didn’t trust that — or her. His dad? He could stay. He seemed like a straight-laced, no-bull kind of guy, and I could work with that.

“I know you really don’t want us in your home, but I feel like I owe you an explanation. When I first heard of you, it was after you’d found out you were pregnant. I was still holding out hope that Bryant would come around and go become a lawyer or something. You were an obstacle that I just couldn’t battle, and I knew that a teenage pregnancy would just ruin both of your lives.”

As she paused, I fought the bile rising, just hearing her speak of Angelica that way. This woman did not understand unconditional love, that at the end of it all, money didn’t buy happiness.

“So then, you lost the baby, and I am truly sorry about that and my words the last time we spoke. They were uncalled for. But Bryant dove off the deep end, pouring himself into a bottle of alcohol and just being a shell of a man. You had destroyed him, and so I despised you.”

Bryant tensed beside me, no doubt ready to toss his mother back out or rein her in again. I knew he understood this was a delicate conversation, and I was fragile.

“And now, as of recent, you got him to kill someone. Again, I realize it wasn’t your fault, but my son, my only baby boy, faced murder charges. It just wasn’t the life I had planned for him, and in my mind, it all came back to you. You were the root of all the evil.”

“Mom!” Bryant yelled, stepping in front of me defensively.

“I’m sorry. I’m sorry. That wasn’t how I meant it. It’s just how I saw it. Now I can see how much Rose means to you, how she makes you a better person, minus the murdering part. But that’s what this love is. It is because she means the world to you. I hope that one day you two can forgive us. That we can meet Angelica with you two, and that we can be a part of your lives.” Eleanor reached for a handkerchief and wiped her eyes as she sniffled.

“Hey, woman! Where are you?” A loud feminine voice bellowed out from the front foyer.

Leave it to her to crash the moment.

“Yeah, hey woman. Where are you?” Grant’s voice mocked her as they stepped in to the living room.

“Remind me to change the locks,” Bryant muttered jokingly in my direction. He stepped away from me and embraced his best friend.

“Whatever,” Grant kidded back, punching Bryant in the arm.

“Oh crap, sorry. I didn’t realize you had company,” Leslie spoke as she realized we were not alone.

“Leslie, hello. It’s okay. We were just leaving.” Eleanor stood, and I looked at Bryant, trying to meet his eyes and give him
the look
. The look that said,
“They are your parents, and they suck, but they are all you get. Don’t let them walk out.”

“Mom, stay. We actually called Leslie and Grant over. And Rose’s mom…” The door opened and closed again. “…is probably almost here now. God, we really need to lock that door or get a chain on it, something.”

As my mom walked in and hugged me, Bryant just laughed once more.

“Anyway, just stay. We have an announcement.”

Everyone sat, nervously fidgeting as Bryant and I walked to the front of the room hand in hand. “So we have news,” Bryant began excitedly. “We found out at Rose’s follow-up appointment a month ago that—”

“I swear to all that is holy, don’t you dare tell me she is pregnant, and it took her a month to tell me,” Leslie growled as my mom fought back a smile.

“Okay, fine. Everyone, except Leslie.” I winked at her, and she stuck her tongue out at me.
My,
how we have matured over the years.
“Bryant and I are expecting a little one.”

Everyone leapt to their feet and rushed over to us, bursting with joy as they congratulated us, one by one. Even Bryant’s parents were part of the celebration, and, despite our past, it warmed my heart.

CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

 

I
T’D BEEN A MONTH SINCE
I had returned to Ingram Elementary, and I still walked past Ian’s classroom with trepidation and fear, waiting for him to jump out of the shadows where he was lurking.

“Hey there,” Becky called from behind, sending me shooting into the air in panic.

“Oh my goodness, Becky. You gave me quite a fright.” I turned to face her, rubbing my arms to calm my nerves.

“Oh, Rose, I am so sorry. I just wanted to tell you that the matter with Ian has been closed. With his case wrapping up and not looking good, the school board has decided there was enough evidence of him being an accomplice and has terminated his contract. I just can’t believe it. He was odd but seemed genuine…” Becky’s voice trailed off as her attention turned to students arriving at school for the day. “Well, at least it is settled. The detective on the case told me he would call to notify me once he receives his verdict and sentencing, but they seemed confident.”

With a wave Becky, waddled off to her office, and I turned to get to my classroom. The last month had been a whirlwind as we’d prepared for Christmas break and had fallen into a routine of normalcy. We had been stripped of that chance so early on that it was nice to just take it easy. The baby was doing well, and we would have our twenty-week appointment that afternoon after school to find out the gender.

 

 

A
S
I
WALKED IN
the front door, I could hear Bryant clanging stuff around in the kitchen. “Babe, we gotta go. Are you almost ready?” I called. I had swung by the house to pick up Bryant since he had the day off.

“Yep, I’m ready.” Bryant strolled out of the kitchen, his navy-blue cotton shirt clinging to his every muscle. His denim jeans hung loosely off his hip.

Stepping up to me, Bryant grabbed my arm and tugged me into him, making me collide with a wall of delicious muscle.

“Hey.” His voice was all gravelly and heated, sending tingles through my body.

“Hey back,” I replied in my own sultry voice as I squeezed my legs together to fight off the growing tension. “We have to go. We’re going to be late.”

Letting out a sigh, Bryant turned and led me out the door then locked it behind us. “So I was thinking…” he began as he held the car door open for me to slide in.

“Well, that is never good,” I teased as he shut the door and walked around to the driver’s side.

Bryant flashed me his crooked smile, and my heart melted. “…I don’t want to know if it is a boy or a girl. I want to be surprised.”

Nodding my head, I tried to decide if I wanted to know or not. “That’s fine.”

We walked into the doctor’s office five minutes early, thanks to Bryant’s driving. As soon as I checked in, a nurse stepped out and called my name.

“Good afternoon. How are you feeling today?” she asked, genuinely concerned.

That was what I loved about this office. It was so homey and relaxed. It felt like an extension of our family because they cared about our baby just as much as we did — just about.

“I’m feeling great. No morning sickness, fatigue — nothing,” I answered as she took my vitals.

“That’s great to hear. Some women just get run through the wringer during their pregnancies, so I am always thrilled to hear someone is enjoying it. Go ahead and pull your pants down past your hips. In just a moment, the doctor will be in.” Smiling, she backed out of the exam room, the door clicking as she shut it.

EPILOGUE

 


C
OME ON,
BABE.
P
USH!”
B
RYANT EXCITEDLY
screamed in my ear.

I was holding his hand so tightly I could see the blood flow cease to reach his fingers. It was all too much — too much pain, excitement, emotion.

“Rose, I need you to focus. This baby is ready to come out. Now you need to push. I know you are tired, but this is what you’ve worked for. This moment is why you have been so careful and listened to me these last few months. Now, on this next contraction, you are going to bring this baby into the world, okay?” The obstetrician’s green eyes made my heart ache for just a moment, reminding me of the pair I’d stared into the last time I was having a baby. I hadn’t heard from Jordan since that day in the courtroom, and, while it wasn’t constantly on my mind, there would be things, like green eyes that would take me back.

“Okay?” she asked again, seeing my gaze blur.

I blinked my eyes rapidly just as a wave took hold of my body once more. It always started in my back, this seizing sensation that immobilized me, and slowly, like lava from a volcano, it spread around to my front until it took hold of my whole body. I could feel the coolness of the air hitting the sweat trickling down my forehead. My brain screamed at me for skipping the epidural on my ingenious plan to have a natural delivery. I was doing it; I had been fine up until this point. But at that moment, I regretted it because I felt like my nether regions were on fire, and I wasn’t sure I could take much more.

“Now!” Bryant and the doctor screamed in unison.

I took hold of my knees like they’d instructed and felt my husband’s hands support my back as I pulled in a deep breath and blew it back out slowly.

One –
two –
three…
Oh my
God,
this hurts so
bad. Four –
five –
six.

“Come on, Rose. I see the baby. You’re almost there,” the nurse who had been with me the last eleven hours cheered from my side. She was just way too chipper for my liking. I kind of just wanted to slap her at that point.

Seven –
eight –
nine…
Relief.
I felt it.

A commotion took hold of the room as a few more nurses stepped closer, and the baby came out. My whole body sagged in relief, spent and exhausted.

I don’t understand how people willingly sign up to
repeat this torture.
They
must be
insane.

The sounds of my baby crying melted my heart at that moment. The soft wails grew louder until they were full out screams as they suctioned out the baby’s mouth and nose. It was all like slow motion as they bustled around; seconds seemed like hours as the realization hit that I’d had a baby. A healthy baby. A baby who was alive and crying and healthy.

Bryant leaned down in front of me, a drunken smile on his face as tears streamed down his cheeks.

“You are crying,” I said.

A laugh took over him as he kissed my lips soundly, letting me taste his salty tears on my lips. “So are you,” he whispered, bringing his hand up to my cheek and catching the tears resting there.

“Mom, Dad, I’d like you to meet your son,” Dr. Shepley announced as she brought the baby into our view.

That tiny little miracle was bundled up in a striped blanket like a little burrito, and I knew right then I would gladly do it all again — to see my husband’s face light up with joy, to feel my heart grow tenfold, but most importantly, to hold a precious baby in my arms and feel an overwhelming amount of unconditional love.

Dr. Shepley placed the baby into Bryant’s arms, and I could see his muscles tense as he carefully cradled our little boy. He held him like a glass chalice, a fragile treasure to behold. Bryant turned toward me so slowly and carefully, and my arms shot out, desperate to hold our baby as well. I scooted over on my bed to give him space to sit with me.

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