Pregnant And Rejected By My Alpha Mate By Caroline Above Chapter 40
Pregnant And Rejected
Chapter 40 Rebirth Seleneâs POV Iâve known more than my fair share of pain over the years, but nothing compares to labor. I feel like Iâm being torn apart from the waist down. Even Wolfsbane didnât come close to this torture.
It happens in waves, swelling and cresting over and over again until Iâm so exhausted and drained that I barely have the strength to keep my eyes open. I want to rest, but every time my muscles relax enough to attempt it, a fresh assault wracks my form with agony and drags me back into consciousness.
âCanât you just knock me out?â I ask the nurses petting and soothing me.
âNo honey.â The nearest one coos. âI know itâs terrible, but youâre doing so well.â She praises. âDo you want some more ice?â
âNo.â I cry, tears slipping from the corners of my eyes, âI want Bastien.â
Drake strokes my hair back from my face, lowering his lips to my ear, âEasy now, Celeste.â He enunciates my false name pointedly, remember who you are.â
I whip my head from right to left, my chest shaking with sobs as I grip the hand rails at my sides with white knuckled fists. âI need him.â I sob piteously. âI canât do this without him.â
Itâs been so long since I let myself think of Bastien, Iâd almost even convinced myself I donât miss him.
Iâve filled my imagination with my shiny new life, my burgeoning accomplishments and independence â
telling myself I finally have everything Iâve ever wanted. But none of it feels right without my mate.
Itâs true I have so many things Iâve never been able to contemplate in the past, and itâs true Iâm happy with my freedom, but these past 6 months have felt just a little too much like a dream. Everything thatâs happening feels true in the moment, but something always seems off, a small part of my mind knows it isnât real. Eventually I have to wake up, and whenever I do, itâs never easy.
Sometimes it happens in the middle of the night, in those stolen hours when deep thoughts always seem to appear unbidden, and unspoken anxieties and emotions rear their ugly heads. Sometimes it happens listening to a familiar song, or watching a movie scene that hits just a little too close to home.
And sometimes it happens when something so jarring and unfathomable strikes that it becomes impossible to pretend any longer like now. This pain has stolen all pretense from my mind, as well as all concern for my own self-preservation.
âShh Celeste.â Drake croons, âYou can do this. Youâve come so far.â
âStop it!â I push his hands away, my roiling hormones making me suddenly furious that my friend is not my mate. âI canât â I donât want⦠I need.â
âJust breathe, honey.â The nurse says, shooting an apologetic glance to Drake. âDonât take it personally, you should hear some of the things laboring moms say to their mates in the heat of the moment.â
âHeâs not my mate!â My despondent wail comes out a whisper, my chest heaving but still unable to draw in enough air. âMy mate didnât want me. He rejected me.â
The nurse pats my hand, holding my gaze with stern but understanding eyes. âIf thatâs true, then heâs not worth your tears, and heâ s the last person you need.â She nods to Drake. âThe people who care are the ones who show up. Theyâre the ones who deserve your love, donât let anyone tell you otherwise.â
My head falls back on the pillow as a contraction eases, and I sniffle pitifully. âIâm sorry.â I hiccup, reaching for my friend. âI didnât mean it.â
âI know, silly wolf.â Drake grins, taking my hand again. âItâs okay, youâre doing so well.â
Another contraction seizes my uterus, and I jolt forward off the bed with a howl, âLiar!â
Just then the door opens, and my doctor sweeps in. Sheâs pulling on gloves with a wide smile that makes me want to hit her, âHow are we doing, Celeste?â She beams.
âGet this thing out of me!â I demand weakly.
âLetâs just see how far along we are.â She suggests calmly.
I moan and writhe as she examines me, feeling no relief at all when she announces, âTen centimeters.â
Her head peaks up from beneath the blanket covering my splayed legs, âAre you ready to become a mom?â
âI was ready fourteen hours ago!â I snap.
Infuriatingly, she just pats my leg and smiles, âThen letâs get this show on the road.â
The nurses follow the doctorâs instructions, positioning themselves on my sides and hooking their arms beneath my legs to help support me while she hunkers down at the end of the bed. I feel so guilty for resenting their touch, but no matter what encouragement or comfort anyone offers me, the fact remains that the only person I want is Bastien.
I channel all my frustration, sorrow and fear into pushing, screaming and groaning at the top of my hoarse lungs. It happens in bursts, bearing down for ten seconds at a time, bawling and retching in between pushes before starting all over again.
After what feels like hours, the sensation of tearing from the inside out eases, and the doctorâs obnoxiously perky voice announces, âitâs a girl!â
Before I can feel relief or joy or anything else for that matter something like an explosion bursts deep in my chest, washing over me in a flood of electricity. The sudden rush of power carries me floating on a tide of memory into the darkness, as the hospital room, and everyone in it, disappears.
Drakeâs POV Elation fades to terror as I watch Selene faint, my attention swinging from her newborn daughter to her slumped body and lolling head. âWait, whatâs happening?â I demand, jerking my head back and forth between the silent baby and my unconscious friend.â
âSir, please step back.â The doctor advises, âher vitals are still strong, she may simply be overwhelmed.â
Despite her words, theyâre all gathering around Selene in a very concerned manner, and three different nurses are gathered around the baby, which has yet to cry.
The heart monitor beeps steadily on, but the doctor is clearly running through a mental checklist, studying different machines and searching for warning signs on my friendâs body.
âWhatâs happening?â I repeat authoritatively, utilizing my rank for the first time.
âSheâs lost consciousness.â The doctor informs me unhelpfully. âHer heart rate and temperature have increased, but theyâre still within the normal range. This does happen sometimes.â Even as she says the words, she looks uncertain.
âAnd the baby?â I demand, âWhy isnât it crying?â
âThese things donât always happen immediately.â The doctor counters, more confidently this time.
As if she heard us speaking, a tiny cry fills the air, the delicate screech of new life greeting the world.
The nurses clean the tiny being and swaddle her in blankets while the doctor continues to work on Selene, eventually approaching me with the squalling bundle. âWould you like to hold her?â The nurse asks, offering me the baby.
I accept her wordlessly, uncertain what to do other than cradle the tiny life like sheâs made of glass.
After standing frozen for a moment I begin to sway gently on my feet, grinning when the babyâs cries soften. A pair of glassy eyes blink open and for a moment iâm completely distracted from my worries.
Itâs Seleneâs eyes looking up at me: one violet, one blue, wide and innocent as can be. Perhaps she will grow to resemble her father, but in this moment she is her motherâs perfect miniature. A swath of dark hair covering her brow, the same pert nose and delicate frame. Iâd be surprised if she even weighs five pounds.
Iâm so enthralled by the baby I donât even notice when Selene begins to stir, though my inattention is quickly remedied by the flurry of activities among the doctor and nurses. They gather around her in a veritable frenzy, rechecking vital signs and running their tests.
Selene moans deep in her throat, tossing her head against the pillow and hazily surfacing consciousness. Her striking eyes blink open in much the same way her daughterâs did, but instead of looking up at me in wonder like the tiny creature in my arms, her gaze is wide and unseeing.
Yet even as Iâm certain she has not returned to us fully, there is something undeniably different about her, and I donât think itâs waking as a mother. It feels as if all the days Iâve known her so far, Iâve only been seeing half of her. And now for the first time, sheâ s appearing to me fully. This is not the same Selene I met in Elysium, or the one Iâve come to know in Asphodel. Sheâs not even the same woman she was five minutes ago.
The haunted waif is gone, replaced by a radiant nymph no different in appearance, but unrecognizable in spirit. Her full lips part as the doctor leans over her, and when she speaks her voice is fuller and stronger than Iâve ever heard it. She does not cry in pain or ask questions, she merely utters a single, reverent word: âLuna.â