Baby Love: A Bad Boy Billionaire Romance (23 page)

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Authors: Vesper Vaughn

Tags: #bad boy, #billionaire bad boy sex baby child twins tattoos NFL football sports romance rich money millionaire reality TV virgin first time steamy oral public sex voyeur, #Sports, #wealthy, #New Adult, #Contemporary Romance

BOOK: Baby Love: A Bad Boy Billionaire Romance
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Everyone nodded. “Alright,” Roger said. “Doors open in five minutes.”

I felt a frisson of excitement as I walked over to Zane and Roger. Okay, I basically waddled. I was enormous and my back was killing me. Today marked one week until the “all-clear” day for the pregnancy. I shouldn’t be walking around but there was too much to do. Zane pulled a chair out of nowhere and nearly shoved me in it. “Sit,” he ordered.

“Yes, Mr. Reid,” I said, shooting him a flirty smile.

Callie was herding strollers into perfect lines, a ball cap pulled down, her long blonde ponytail hanging out the back. She was a woman on a mission.

“Who’s the hottie?” Roger asked Zane loudly. Callie heard him. She shot him a look that withered. Roger grasped his heart dramatically. “She wounds me with her stare alone. Seriously, who is she?”

“Rachel’s sister. I wouldn’t fuck with her if I were you,” Zane replied. He checked his watch. “I’ve got that appointment thing today, okay?” He kissed the top of my head. “I’ll call you when I’m on my way. I’ll be no more than two hours and I’ll be back here to help clean up.”

I nodded and squeezed his hand. Zane turned to Roger. “If she moves out of this chair, call me and I’m coming right back over here.” He turned back to me. “And
you
: no standing up. At all.”

“I’ve got it. I promise. Scout’s honor,” I replied, holding up three fingers.

Zane trotted out of the ballroom just as the main doors opened and the women started pouring in, wide-eyed at the selection. Volunteers at the door handed out checklists and Callie herded them into each section. I bemusedly watched as Roger educated one pregnant woman on the benefits of a particularly pricey stroller. He looked like a new person to me.

I nodded off in the corner in my comfy little chair, waking up to my phone vibrating. I slid my finger across the screen. “Hey,” I said. “Are you done with your appointment?”

I heard monitors beeping in the background. My stomach dropped through my feet. “First off, do not panic,” Zane said. “I don’t need my pregnant girlfriend panicking.”

“Zane, where are you?” I tried to push myself into a standing position but I saw Roger’s face from across the room and I sat back down.

“They found a full-formed aneurysm in my brain and I need to go in for surgery for them to clip it. It’s small, really small. They caught it early. It’s a quick surgery, just a few hours, but the doctor wants me in today.”

“I am going to kill you, Zane,” I hissed into the phone. “If you die on me, I’m going to kill you.”

Zane laughed. “I’ve already called Michael to come pick you up. I go into surgery in about an hour,” Zane said. “Please breathe, please do not walk to the curb by yourself. Get Roger to help you, alright?” He told me the name of the hospital and his room number. I hung up with a string of hurried
I love yous
and waved Roger over.

He walked me to the curb and sent me off with Michael. I was silent and nibbling my fingers the entire drive. Michael insisted pushing me in a wheelchair all the way upstairs. Several nurses asked me if I was looking for labor and delivery, panic crossing their faces at my enormous size. “I’m not in labor,” I replied.

“Not yet, honey, but those babies look like they’re about to slide out any second.”

I waved them away. “Ugh,” I hissed when we made it to the elevator.

Michael patted my shoulder. “You’ll miss the attention when these girls make their way into the world.”

I looked up at him to see if he was joking. He wore a wry smile and I realized with relief that he was giving me a hard time.

I gasped when I saw Zane. There were tubes and wires coming out of him and the nurse was finishing up shaving his entire head. It was bald and shone under the hospital lights. “Oh God, I’m dating Lex Luthor,” I said, shocked.

He laughed and grabbed my hand, kissing it. “I told her to just take it all off. It’ll grow back in a few months. Better to be entirely bald instead of just have one section missing, I think.”

I rubbed his clean scalp as the nurse wiped off the rest of the shaving cream. “I kind of like it,” I replied. “You sort of look like a really pale version of The Rock.”

Zane beamed and wiggled his eyebrows at me. “Considering he’s top of your list of celebrities you’d leave me for, I think I’ll never grow my hair back.”

The nurse finished up. Michael waited quietly in the corner of the room. The doctor appeared a few minutes later. “You ready, Zane?”

“Oh God, is this your surgeon?” I whispered from my wheelchair. “He’s an
infant
, Zane!”

The round-faced doctor smiled at me. “I assure you I’m a resident,” he replied. “I’ve done this many, many times. It’s a straight-forward procedure.”

Zane grabbed my hand as the nurses began to prep the gurney for transport. Fear flashed through his eyes, which made me more nervous than anything else. I’d never seen that look on his face before. “Rachel, I need to tell you something. I made you sign that ridiculous contract because I was afraid you wouldn’t love me otherwise. I wanted to keep you close to me. I didn’t want you to run away. But I’m sorry I did it.”

I stood up to kiss his forehead and rub his smooth, bald scalp. “I’m not sorry,” I said, grabbing my stomach and patting it lightly. “Think of all the condomless sex we wouldn’t have had without that damn contract!”

Zane laughed uproariously and I joined in, tears streaming down my face. They were from a potent mixture of fear and laughter. Suddenly my bladder let loose. “Oh God,” I said. “I think I just wet myself laughing.” I looked down at the water stain on my jeans. It was enormous. “Oh no. Oh not now. No, not now.”

“What’s wrong?” Zane sat upright. Then he saw my pants. “Nurse! We need a nurse. My wife- my girlfriend is going into labor.”

The doctor replied calmly. “We can’t postpone the surgery, Mr. Reid. You need to go now.”

Tears stung my eyes but I held them back for Zane. There was no way he would go if I was crying. “It’s fine. I’ll be fine. It will probably take forever anyway. My mom was in labor with me and Callie for like a day apiece. And this is
two
babies so basically this will take forever. Go.
Go
.”

“I love you, Rachel,” Zane said.

“I love you, too.” I tried to breathe as they wheeled us away from each other; him on a gurney and me in a wheelchair. Everything would be alright.

It had to be.

***

“You both have impeccable timing, I’ll give you that,” Roger quipped, bursting through the hospital room door with balloons and flowers and – to my surprise – Callie.

Callie ran over to me and squeezed my hand. “You’re getting the epidural, right?”

I chortled. “First thing I asked for after the fuzzy socks. The epidural guy should be here in a minute.” There were so many stickers and wires attached to me I felt like a robot.

“Is the pain okay?” she asked, as a contraction hit me and I nearly vomited on myself. I screwed up my face and squeezed her hand as hard as I possibly could. When I opened my eyes, I saw that Michael had put down his crossword puzzle, his eyebrows knitted in concern.

“Ms. Rachel, are you sure there’s not something I can do for you?” he asked kindly.

“You didn’t call mom, did you?” I screamed to Callie as the next contraction hit me. They were awfully close together. I tried not to think about what that meant. It had only been an hour.

“I would have only done that if I still hated you for dating my husband,” she joked. “Mom doesn’t have to know until the girls are like, eighteen and out of her grasp.”

The laughter was what I needed as I came down from the contraction. “Hells bells that was a big one.”

“Your accent’s back,” Callie said, wiping my sweating forehead. “Imagine that.”

Dr. Fuentes walked in and tapped his fingers on my chart. “Everybody out or behind the curtain, please.” He pulled on gloves as I put my feet into the stirrups. A moment later he was snapping his gloves off with urgency. “Rachel, you’re too far along for an epidural. But the babies are in a good position and I see no reason you won’t be delivering these girls within the next half hour or so.”

Another contraction hit, this time even harder than the last. I couldn’t hold back my screams. Dr. Fuentes actually flinched from the volume. When it passed, I was panting hard. “You’re joking about the epidural, right? My water only broke like an hour ago.”

He shrugged. “Some women’s labor just moves right along on its own. This is good. That means this will all be over really, really soon.” He zipped open the curtain to reveal Callie, Roger, and Michael shooting furtive looks at one another. “Where’s Zane?” he asked.

I burst into tears at the mention of his name.

Callie stepped up to answer for me. “He’s in emergency surgery for an aneurysm clip.” She held onto my hand as I cried.

Dr. Fuentes nodded. “We can’t stop this, Rachel. You’ve gotta do it. But it looks like you won’t be alone.” He acknowledged the unlikely crowd gathered around my bedside. “I’ll give you just a few minutes. Remember: breathe.” He walked out and shut the door.

Panic rose up in my chest. I felt like breathing was the last thing I was capable of doing at the moment.

Roger grabbed my hand. “Rachel, look at me.” I was so surprised by his touch I did as he asked, my tears drying up in an instant. “You’ve got this. You once stood up to Scott Friend. I’ve never seen anyone do that, remember? That hasn’t changed. Pushing two babies out of a very, very narrow channel?” He went green and tapered off his enthusiastic speech.

Callie rolled her eyes and stepped in. “Disregarding that last bit of poetic description, he’s right. Rachel, you’re the strongest person I know. You can do this. Look at that clock. It’s just like when we went to parties, remember? Pretend like you’ll be reading a book and when it’s three o’clock, this will all be over. The pain will be done.”

I nodded and breathed. Another wave of pain rolled over me, and Michael stepped up; he grabbed a tennis ball to rub my back. “The three wise men,” I said groggily. What a strange trio they made.

This was my team. We were going to do this together.

 

CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE

ZANE

I remembered fuzzy, foggy voices coming in and out of earshot. I remembered white lights. I remembered a nurse telling me that the surgery went well. And then I remembered the thing that I was missing.

I sat upright but was pushed back to the gurney at once by a slim hand. “Lay back down, Mr. Reid,” said the feminine voice.

“My girlfriend. She was in labor. I need to help her.” I reached to my arm to rip out the IV but realized my arms were restrained.

“You’ve been trying to get up for the last two hours, Mr. Reid. We had to restrain you for a while. If you just wait for another half an hour, we can wheel you to your girlfriend and your baby girls.”

My eyes pricked with tears. “They’re here already? How long was my surgery?”

The nurse patted my arm. “Your surgery was quick, but those girls were ready to be here, Mr. Reid. They weren’t planning on letting a little thing like brain surgery stop them.”

It was the longest thirty minutes of my life, but finally, the wait was over. Michael had pulled some strings and the orderly wheeled me into a joint private room with Rachel. She cried when she saw me. The orderly pushed our beds as close together as they would go. “Hey,” she said.

“Are you alright? You look incredible.” She did. She was glowing and peaceful.  “I’m sorry I wasn’t here. I wanted to be here.”

She squeezed my hand. “I had backup. It’s alright.” She motioned to the corner where Roger was snoring, fast asleep while sitting upright. “He’s gotten more sleep than I have.”

“Where are Michael and Callie?” I asked.

“They’re downstairs in the cafeteria,” she replied.

“And the girls?”

“In the ICU,” she said quietly.

My heartrate monitor started beeping rapidly. “What?”

She hushed me. “They’re fine. They’re here just a few days early and they’re a little small, a little jaundiced. But Dr. Fuentes said they’d only have to be here for about a week.”

I sighed with relief. “That’s how long I’m here for, so I’d say that works out well.”

“Roger did say we have impeccable timing,” Rachel quipped. She looked at the clock on the wall. “They’ll be bringing the girls in here to feed in a few minutes. You’ll get to meet our daughters.”

I beamed at her. “You still love me with no hair and part of my skull missing?”

She nodded. “Of course I do.”

I squeezed her hand harder. “Rachel. Will you marry me? Again?”

Rachel squeezed her eyes shut and a few tears rolled down her perfect cheeks. “Yes. Of course I will.”

“Oh thank fuck,” I said, my heart finally slowing down. “I hope I remember this later. I think I’m on some pretty heavy painkillers.” My eyelids fluttered shut as I said those words. The last thing I remember was Rachel laughing.

***

The girls – my girls, our girls - were perfect. A little yellow and mottled, but perfect. I held one of them while Rachel held the other in our dueling gurneys. “Their fingers are so tiny,” I said quietly.

“We should probably name them soon,” Rachel pointed out.

“You mean Baby Girl One Reid and Baby Girl Two Reid aren’t good enough?” I said jokingly.

“Well, they might hold it against us when they can finally talk,” Rachel said, tracing her finger along baby girl one’s cheek.

“How about Emma and Sophie?” I offered.

Rachel smiled. “I love those. Emma Charlotte and Sophie Elizabeth, after their real aunt and their honorary aunt.”

“Liz is totally going to cry. And so is Callie,” I said.

As if on cue, the hospital doors opened up and in piled Roger, Callie, Michael, and Liz. Liz was carrying a huge bouquet of sunflowers. “I came to see my new babies,” Liz said, walking over and kissing Rachel on the cheek.

“We finally named them,” I announced. “Emma Charlotte-“ Callie burst into immediate tears. “And Sophie Elizabeth.” Liz began tearing up, a phenomenon I’d never previously witnessed.

“Nice names,” Roger said. “As long as they’re spelled the normal way.”

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