Acts of Mercy: Part 2 – Chapter 24
Acts of Mercy: A Stepbrother Romance (Men of WRATH Book 5)
Itâs been two days since Hudson left on his mission and two days since Charlotte handed me her doctorâs info.
Iâd be lying if I said I wasnât scared out of my mind, wondering about all the âwhat ifâ scenarios that could happen should I be carrying Hudsonâs child.
After the girlsâ interrogation on the matter, it was clear I wasnât jumping for joy at the idea of being a teen mom. Not because I didnât want to be a mother, but because I was dreading having to tell my own.
Sheâd been a teen mom herself and there wasnât a day growing up where she didnât remind me of it.
It wasnât until she started dating James that she finally quit mentioning her big mistake. Me.
âWhatever you do, Alyssa. Donât get knocked up. It will ruin your dreams and hold you back. The last thing you want is to struggle like I have, ending up with the first Joe Schmo who gets between your legs.â
She resented my dad for getting her pregnantâwhich is insane. Last I checked, it takes two to tango. But that logic went out the window when the boy who got you pregnant came from the same low-rent neighborhood you did.
I roll my eyes as memories flit back to arguments my parents had about money and how my mom always said Daddy never made enough. That he wasnât ever enough.
I still remember the day Iâd found out heâd left. I came home, expecting to see my dad, but Mother quickly set me straight. âThat good for nothing man is long gone. Itâs better this way. Now I can find you a new daddy. One whoâd actually provide.â
Thankfully, my dad wasnât deterred from seeing me, much to my motherâs dismay. I didnât get to spend time with him during the school year because he was off working on oil rigs, but he made sure to pick me up every summer, taking me on road trips in Big Red.
I wonder how Dad would take the news of a grandbaby if he were still here. Whatever his reaction would be, I bet it would be nothing like the one I knew Iâd receive from my mother.
âAlyssa Rogers.â
I look up from my lap and see a cheerful nurse in pink scrubs. âMs. Rogers. Are you ready?â
Getting up from my seat, I walk toward her and attempt a feeble smile as she hands me a cup.
âThe bathroom is around the corner. Please fill this container and leave it in the cut-through window.â The blond quickly looks down at her chart before shooting me a sad smile. âYouâre Charlotteâs friend. Please give her my regards. Tell her Lizzy sends hugs.â
She mustâve seen the favor Charlotte called in to get me an appointment so quickly. They must know what sheâs been through with her loss. âYes. I am and I will.â
With a small nod she leaves me to do my business, counting down the minutes until I get the answer to a question that has the power to shake my world to its core.
âCongratulations! Youâre pregnant.â Dr. Bower exclaims, a toothy grin practically taking up her entire face.
In that moment, a surge of happiness threatens to knock me over and off of the exam table.
Unchecked butterflies flutter through me as my head bobs up and down, nodding like one of those bobble heads.
What Iâm nodding to, I have no clue.
Acknowledgement that my life has irrevocably changed?
Even when I took the at-home pregnancy test, I found a million and one excuses to disbelieve the glaring result on the tiny window. But now, here under the fluorescent lighting of this room, thereâs no more denying it.
Iâm pregnant. And despite all of my prior apprehension and fear, I canât help but feel unfettered joy.
I donât care what my mother will say. All I care about is my tiny unborn baby and all the love he or she already holds. My baby could never be a mistake.
Sure, this wasnât planned. Not really. But I mean, it doesnât take a genius to figure out that if Iâm not on birth control and we never used a condom, this would eventually happen.
A quick pang of anxiety hits me, wondering what Hudson will think, but then itâs eased by the memory of his hand splayed across my abdomen. He hasnât said as much, but heâs taken unprotected liberties. The last two of which were clearly intentional.
âMy tech is going to bring in the ultrasound. Based on your last menstrual cycle, it looks like you may still be early on so this will have to be transvaginal.â
Just then, another woman in pink scrubs rolls in a machine.
âWill we be able to see the baby?â My heart stutters at the thought of seeing something so magical without Hudson by my side.
âAt this stage, we should be able to see a sac and possibly hear the heartbeat. Again, this depends on when exactly you got pregnant.â
She lays me down gently, instructing me to pull up the gown Iâm wearing while pulling out a rod from the machine and sliding over a condom looking thing on it. What the fuck?
Itâs then I remembered the words transvaginal. Well, damn.
I feel my brows pull together, something that doesnât go unnoticed by Dr. Bower. âJust relax your legs for me, please.â
She pulls my knees apart and inserts the device before training her eyes on the screen attached to the machine. Thereâs the slight furrowing of her brows and pursing of her lips before she shoots the nurse a quick glance. âWhat did you say the last date of her cycle was?â
The nurse rattles off something, but Iâm now acutely aware of Dr. Bowers mouth, which is still pursed.
âOkay.â She removes the wand and stows it away before turning back to look at me, her mouth now curved in a professional smile. âNow, I donât want you to worry.â
No. No. No. Nothing good could start with that.
I chew on my bottom lip, waiting for her to crush what happiness Iâd just found.
âSo thereâs no visible gestational sac and no heartbeat as of yet. But I donât want you to be discouraged. Weâre going to do some blood work and check your HCG levels and then try again in a couple of days based on those results.â
I blink rapidly, trying to digest her words. âSo, am I not pregnant?â
âThere are several reasons why we couldnât see the sac. Maybe itâs just too early, and the blood test will support that assessment if thatâs the case.â
âAnd the alternative would be what?â I know she probably thinks Iâm dense, but I need her to spell things out for me. In the past hour Iâve gone from anxious to scared, and then elated to now⦠what⦠what do I feel?
âThere are other possibilities.â
âAnd those are?â My eyes narrow, needing her to spit it out already.
âIt could be an ectopic pregnancy, or maybe it wasnât viable. But those are things we donât have to discuss right now. We donât want to put any undue stress on the body.â She rolls in her lips, obviously uncomfortable with the somber mood weâve shifted into.
I give her a nod and she takes it as her cue to exit. âOkay then, the nurse will take you for bloodwork and then youâll come back in a couple of days to do it again. The ranges between the two will give us a good idea of the progression.â She reaches out, giving my shoulder a small squeeze. âIâll see you soon.â
She walks out of the room, leaving a hollow ache in my chest as her words replay in my head.
Not viable.
Not viable.
Not viable.
What kind of sick twisted game has fate played me? Is this a punishment for having gone against my motherâs wishes? For wanting a man I shouldnât?
Well, at least one thing is clear.
Wiping away my tears, I know exactly how Iâd feel about a baby with Hudson. Itâd be a blessing. Never a mistake.