“I’ll stay and hold her.”
“You don’t have to. That chair looks super uncomfortable.”
“It is, but I feel like I shouldn’t complain. I didn’t get my nether regions ripped just hours ago.”
She shudders. “I asked the doctor to stitch me up extra tight.”
I laugh. “It’ll feel like your first time, baby.”
“We have at least six weeks until we attempt anything again. That’s probably the longest you’ve gone without sex since we started dating isn’t it?”
I look down at Ella, heart still so full. “It’s not, actually.”
She raises an eyebrow. “Really?”
“There was a time, recently. I haven’t been with anyone else but you since that night.”
“Since the night we got drunk and made a baby?”
I nod.
She smiles, but looks confused. “I’m glad to hear that, but you didn’t know I was pregnant—hell, I didn’t know—for like two months after that. It just seems out of character for you. The former you, I mean.”
“I wanted to be with you for so long. Then I finally was and couldn’t remember anything. It was worse than putting food out of a starving man’s reach. It was letting him taste it but not eat it. I had you, had what I wanted, but blew it. I would have given anything to have that chance again and remember it. Because I knew being with you would be different.”
“Noah,” she says softly, looking at me with so much love in her eyes.
“I love you, Lauren. I always have, and I always will.”
Chapter 27
LAUREN
“AM I HURTING her? I’m hurting her!”
“You’re not hurting her,” Noah says, somehow calm.
“Then why is she crying?” I scoop Ella up out of the carseat, feeling like I’m fumbling with the world’s most precious football.
“Because she’s a baby?”
“Shhh,” I soothe, gently swaying Ella. It takes a few seconds, but she stops crying. “See? I don’t think she likes the carseat.”
Noah puts his hand on my shoulder, steps in, and kisses me. “Want to wait until the nurse comes back?”
“Yeah.” I cradle Ella to my chest and sit, cringing when my ass hits the mattress.
“Are you hurting?” Noah sits next to me and slips his arm around my waist. I’m still in my pajamas. The cute going-home outfit I had packed for myself—leggings and a sweater—isn’t working. I can’t breastfeed in the sweater, and feel dumb for not thinking about that when I picked it out. And the leggings are too revealing for the mesh undies and giant pads needed after pushing out a seven-pound babe.
Live and learn?
“Yeah. I think this is worse than labor.”
“You’ll heal and forget all about the pain.”
“Hah, maybe.” I bend my head down and kiss Ella. She’s in her cute going-home outfit at least. She looks like a little wrinkled peanut, but she’s the cutest little wrinkled peanut that ever existed.
Noah’s mom said she looks like him as a baby, and texted over pictures from his baby book. There is no denying this is his child.