Free Read Novels Online Home

First Comes Love by Emily Giffin (33)

chapter thirty-three

JOSIE

It is Thanksgiving Day, and exactly two weeks after Dr. Lazarus shot me up with a vial of Gabe’s sperm. It is also the day upon which she told us we could take a pregnancy test and expect reliable results. I wake up and head straight to Gabe’s room, finding him shirtless in front of his closet.

“Happy Thanksgiving,” I say, grateful that we are spending it together, no matter what our results turn out to be.

“Happy Thanksgiving,” he says, eyeing the box of First Response tests in my hand.

“Should we do this now?” I say, holding it up and giving it a little shake. “Or wait until later?”

He shrugs, selecting an unlikely green rugby shirt that he’s had since college. “Your call,” he says. “I’m ready when you are.”

“Maybe we should do it later,” I say, waffling. “So we don’t ruin Thanksgiving if it’s negative?”

“Would that really ruin Thanksgiving?” Gabe asks in such a way that I think, not for the first time, that he secretly hopes the test is negative. “I mean—we’re just sitting around with my parents and your mom. And we’re not going to tell anyone today either way….Isn’t that what we decided?”

I nod. “Yeah. That’s what we decided…but I’ll definitely be disappointed. Won’t you?” I say, scrutinizing his face.

“A little,” he says. “But honestly, I’ll be more surprised if you are pregnant. What did Dr. Lazarus say we have? A twenty percent chance?”

“Yeah. At best.”

“Right,” he says. “So if you’re not—and you’re probably not—we just try again. And maybe she gives you some fertility drugs this time.”

Rationally, I know he’s completely right. It’s just one month, one try, albeit a fairly expensive first attempt. I think of all the couples who try for years before they get a positive test, going through round after round of IVF, and know that I haven’t earned the right to feel anything close to a sense of hopelessness. And yet I still have the feeling that this might be it for me. My one and only chance. And that if it doesn’t happen this way, right now with Gabe, then it might never happen at all.

When I try to articulate this, I expect Gabe to reassure me—or tell me I’m being melodramatic. But instead he nods, and says, “Yeah. I know what you mean.”

“So you feel that way, too?” I ask, my heart sinking.

“A little,” he says, sitting next to me on the edge of his bed. “I mean—I think you’ll have a baby eventually…I just don’t know that it will be with me.”

My stomach flutters with disappointment.

“Because of Leslie?” I say. Not because she’s been at all difficult or jealous through this whole uncharted, unnatural process. To the contrary, she has handled everything with grace and generosity—which has only made Gabe like and respect her more.

But he shakes his head and says no, it has nothing to do with Leslie.

“Then why?” I ask him as I sit on his bed.

He gives me a frank look and says, “Well. Because of Pete.”

I shake my head. “No. Pete’s cool with it, too. He’s really rooting for us,” I say, thinking of how supportive he’s been over the past few weeks, calling to check on me and even wishing me good luck before my insemination appointment.

Gabe smirks and says, “Give it up, Josie. He likes you. A lot.

“I know he does,” I say. “And I like him. But he agrees that we need to keep things…compartmentalized.”

“All right,” he says. “So what are we waiting for, then?”

“I guess nothing,” I say, staring at the box in my lap before slowly removing the cellophane wrapping, pulling out one fortune-telling stick, then squinting down to read the fine-print instructions on the back of the box.

He laughs, slapping the box out of my hands and giving me a little shove off the bed. “C’mon. Like you haven’t done this before,” he says. “Quit stalling and go find out if you’re knocked up.”

LESS THAN FIVE minutes later, after I’ve peed on a stick, carefully capped it, and left it on Gabe’s bathroom counter, I walk back into his room and give him a blank stare. He stares back at me, equally expressionless, and takes a guess. “Negative?”

I shake my head.

“Positive?” he says, his voice rising with disbelief.

I shake my head again, then tell him I don’t know. “I didn’t look….Would you please go check it for me?”

He nods and stands, looking pale, a tough feat with olive skin.

“Wait,” I say, reaching out and grabbing his arm. “What do you want it to be?”

Gabe swallows, hesitates, and cleverly avoids answering the question. “I want you to have the baby you’re meant to have….”

“C’mon. That’s a cop-out,” I say. “Do you hope it’s negative? Or positive?”

He takes a deep breath and says, “Okay…I want it to be positive.”

“Why?” I ask, my heart racing.

“Why?” he says. “What do you mean why? Why would we have done all this if we didn’t want it to be positive?”

“So you don’t have cold feet?” I ask. “Not even a little bit?”

Gabe shakes his head and says, “I’m nervous, yeah. And it’s a little crazy what we’re doing here…a lot crazy….But fuck it…at this point, I’m all in.” He shrugs and gives me one of his rebellious looks.

“Fuck it?” I say, feeling queasy. “Fuck it?”

“You know what I mean….” he says, smiling. “It’s too late now.”

“But it’s not too late if it’s negative,” I say. “You’d be off the hook….We wouldn’t have to try again.”

“True,” he says, nodding, clearly making a big effort to be patient with me. “But if it’s positive—”

“How would you feel?” I grill him.

“I don’t know, Josie,” he says, shaking his head, staring into space. “Happy…excited…shocked…scared shitless…a lot of things.”

“But no regret?”

He shakes his head. “No. No regret.”

“Do you promise?”

“I swear,” he says, holding up three fingers, even though he was never a Boy Scout.

“Okay,” I say, looking at him sideways. “Because, Gabe, I have to tell you something….”

“Yeah?” he asks, squinting back at me with apprehension.

“I actually did look at the stick,” I confess, my heart beating wildly in my chest.

“And?”

“And it’s positive.”

“Shut the hell up,” he says, dashing to the bathroom. He returns one beat later, waving the stick with its unmistakable two bright-pink parallel lines. His eyes are shining and his face is lit with pure happiness, an expression I honestly never expected and have seldom seen him show.

“Holy shit,” he says, throwing his arms around me, squeezing me so hard I can’t breathe. “We’re having a baby.”

“Yes,” I say, laughing and crying at once. “We’re having a baby.”

I’M PREGNANT. I’m pregnant. I’m pregnant.

For the next several days, I repeat the words in my head, over and over. Gabe and I talk of little else, both of us struggling to digest the magnitude of what we’ve undertaken. Yet the whole thing continues to feel surreal—and I have the sense that it won’t begin to really sink in until I share the news with at least one other person.

In the past, I always imagined telling my family first, then close friends, then the rest of the world around three months. Then again, I also always imagined following the traditional order of things—as in love, marriage, baby carriage—and that’s clearly all out the window now.

So a few days later, I decide I might as well go really unorthodox and tell Pete the news first. In part, it’s a pragmatic decision, as we have plans to hang out for the first time in several weeks, and I know he’ll likely ask me if I’m pregnant (not that that stopped me from fibbing to Sydney when the subject came up at recess and I told her that I hadn’t yet tested). But more important, and for some inexplicable reason, I actually just want him to be the first to know.

Out of respect to Gabe, I call and make sure that it’s okay with him as I’m driving over to Pete’s house.

“Shouldn’t we wait for a heartbeat?” he asks.

“I don’t think I can wait until then. Besides, I’m sure he’s going to ask….”

“Well, it’s your call. Whatever you want to do is fine with me….”

“So you haven’t told Leslie?”

“Nope.”

“Are you going to tell her?”

“Well, eventually,” he says with a laugh. “It’ll be sort of hard to hide it, right?”

I decide not to parse his words or grill him about whether he wishes he could hide it from her, and simply tell him that I’ll call him later.

“Okay. Later,” he says, hanging up way too abruptly.

I roll my eyes, reminding myself that the fact that I’m carrying his baby doesn’t mean that he’ll suddenly change his personality.

A FEW MINUTES later, I walk into Pete’s house. He beams at me and says, “It’s so good to see you.”

“You, too,” I say, telling myself to wait for the right moment to break my news. But before I even remove my jacket, I blurt it out.

“I’m pregnant,” I say, getting what I’m pretty sure is my first wave of morning sickness.

He looks at me, startled, a smile frozen on his face. “Are you serious?”

“As a heart attack…or an unwed pregnancy,” I say, a joke Gabe came up with a few nights ago.

I watch the news sink in, his expression turning glazed, then somber. “Wow,” he says. “That was fast.”

“Yeah. I know,” I reply with a high, nervous laugh. “First try.”

“Congrats…I’m really happy for you.”

“Thanks,” I say.

He smiles, then leans in to awkwardly hug me, patting me on the back before helping me out of my jacket, then hanging it in his hall closet. He turns and leads me into his kitchen, as he fires off a quick round of questions. “So, how do you feel? Excited?…How’s Gabe doing?” His voice is chipper, but something about his face looks strained.

“It’s still sort of hard to process,” I say, noticing an open bottle of red wine and two glasses on his counter. “But we’re both happy. And very grateful.”

“Well…that’s fantastic news. Really fantastic.” He pours both glasses, then stops suddenly. “Oh, shit. What am I doing? You can’t have this, can you?”

I shake my head, feeling suddenly embarrassed, though I can’t put my finger on why.

He merges both glasses into one very full one, then takes a sip, swallows, and smiles. “So what can I get you to drink?”

“Oh, nothing. I’m fine,” I say, as we awkwardly stare at each other, and it actually crosses my mind to just say goodbye and gracefully exit.

“Let me at least give you some water,” he says, getting a glass from his cabinet, then filling it from the faucet. He stares at it a beat, then pours it out and hands me a bottle of Poland Spring from his refrigerator instead.

“Thanks,” I say, untwisting the cap.

“Do you want a glass?”

“No, this is fine.”

He gives me a closemouthed smile, nods, then asks when I’m due.

“August third,” I say. “According to our calculations…but we have an appointment next week to check on all of that.”

“So you haven’t been to the doctor yet?”

I shake my head.

“So how do you know for sure that you’re pregnant?” he asks, sounding a little hopeful, though maybe that part is just in my head.

“About five tests tell me I am.” I force a smile.

He smiles back at me, nods, then asks how my parents took the news. “I assume they’re excited, too?”

“I haven’t told them yet.”

“No?”

“Your sister?”

“Nope. Still haven’t talked to her since I left New York….You’re actually the first person I’ve told,” I say with a nervous laugh, suddenly questioning my judgment.

“Wow, Josie…Thank you. That’s so nice….I’m really honored,” he says. “And touched.”

I nod and glance away, mumbling that it’s really no big deal.

“Yeah, it is,” he says kindly, starting to sound like himself again. “And I’m just so happy for you. This is what you wanted—and you got it. Good for you.” He hugs me again; this time it feels warm and genuine.

“Thank you. I really appreciate that,” I say, as we separate. “But there are a couple of drawbacks….” My voice trails off, but I do my best not to look sad.

“Oh?” he replies. “And what are those?”

“Well…for one…I’m going to get really fat.” I laugh.

Pregnant. Not fat,” he says.

It is the exact right thing to say, and I tell him so.

He smiles and gives me a playful high five. “Gotta love when you say the right thing to a pregnant woman.”

I smile.

“So…what’s the other drawback?”

I take another sip of water, stalling for a few seconds before admitting the truth. How I really feel. “Well, I’m a little sad, too.”

“About?”

“About us…I know this will change things between us.”

Pete nods, now looking unmistakably sad, too. “Yeah,” he says. “I guess it probably will.”

My heart sinks, though I am also relieved by his candor. In fact, his complete lack of bullshit might be one of the things I like best about him. So I press onward—and ask him the question I’ve been wondering since Thanksgiving morning.

“So tell me. If I hadn’t gone down this road…with Gabe…If I weren’t pregnant…?” I stop suddenly and shake my head at the futility of what-ifs. “Never mind,” I say, shaking my head.

“No. Go on,” he insists, holding my gaze. “Please?”

“Okay.” I nod, then take a deep breath and finish. “If I weren’t having a baby, could you have seen a future for us? I mean—any possibility of a future?”

Pete’s eyes say it all, even before he nods and utters a very clear yes.

I chew my lower lip, willing myself not to feel regret. Telling myself we could’ve just as easily broken up in a few months, setting my time line back that much further, bringing me one step closer to my ultimate, inevitable infertility. I also remind myself that this is what I’ve always wanted—that I’m going to be a mother, and although motherhood is a gift, it is also a sacrifice: the ultimate sacrifice. I might as well get used to that now.

“Oh, well,” I finally say, forcing a small shrug and smile. “Story of my life.”

Several long seconds pass before he clears his throat and says, “But ask me the question a different way.”

I hesitate, confused. “What do you mean?”

“Ask me if I can still picture a future for us?” he says, his cheeks now flushed.

My heart racing, I ask the question, our eyes locked: “Can you still picture a future for us?”

He takes one of my hands in his. “Yeah. I can, actually….It’s a long shot…but I still can.”

I shiver, goosebumps rising everywhere—on my arms and legs and the back of my neck. “Really?” I ask, my insides melting, my voice trembling. “Do you really mean that?”

He nods, looking as earnest as he ever has—which is saying a lot. “Yes, Josie, I do mean that. I’ve been thinking about this a lot….And this baby isn’t a deal breaker for me. If anything, it makes me care for you more.”

I have trouble believing what I’ve just heard—and yet I do. “Why?” I whisper.

He pauses and frowns, looking deep in thought. “Because it shows me what you’re made of,” he finally says. “It shows me that you’re strong and independent and truly committed to the most beautiful thing a woman can do….I’m blown away….” He smiles. “Blown away, but not going anywhere.”

“Even though it could get really messy?” I ask, thinking of how Will used to feel about Gabe. About anything that deviated from his script of how life should look.

“Yeah,” he says. “Love has a way of working stuff out. Even the messy parts.”

“Wait,” I say, feeling a smile spread across my face. “Are you saying you love me?”

“No,” he says, grinning as he takes my other hand. “But I’m not ruling it out….I could definitely see myself loving you…loving both of you.”

For a second I think he means Gabe, then realize that he’s talking about the baby.

“That’s funny,” I say, squeezing his hands and smiling, “because I could definitely see the two of us loving you back.”

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Alexa Riley, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Sophie Stern, Leslie North, Elizabeth Lennox, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, Jordan Silver, Bella Forrest, C.M. Steele, Jenika Snow, Madison Faye, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Dale Mayer, Delilah Devlin, Sloane Meyers, Penny Wylder, Piper Davenport,

Random Novels

Escaping Ryan by Ginger Ring

Water Spell (Guardians of the Realm Book 1) by Lizzy Ford

Sassy Ever After: Demon Mate (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Sheri Lyn

Stud Finder (1001 Dark Nights) by Lauren Blakely

Damaged: The Complete Set Including DIRTY and FILTHY: A Dark Romance (The Damage Romance Box Set) by Michelle Horst

My Omega's Baby: An Mpreg Romance (Bodyguards and Babies Book 1) by S.C. Wynne

The Mercenary Pirate (The Heart of a Hero Book 10) by Katherine Bone, The Heart of a Hero Series

A Match Made In Duty by Platt, Meara

The Thug by Jordan Silver

Blind Kiss by Carlino, Renée

Nailed (A Real Man, 16) by Jenika Snow

Evermore (Knight Everlasting Book 3) by Cassidy Cayman, Dragonblade Publishing

The Summer of New Beginnings: A Magnolia Grove Novel by Bette Lee Crosby

Fighting For Your Love (The Fighting Series Book 4) by Nikki Ash

The Favor by Blaire Edens

Broken Rebel by Sherilee Gray

At the Tycoon’s Service by Maya Banks

The Royal Baby: An Mpreg Romance by Austin Bates

Playing to Win by Laura Carter

The Billionaire's Legacy: A Billionaire Romance (The Hampton Billionaires Book 5) by Erika Rose