Chapter 76
His Nanny Mate
Chapter 76: Temper
Edrick
The next day after our minor argument, I was happy to see that Moana took me up on my offer and
decided to take the day off. I insisted that she let the driver take her wherever she wanted to go. She
left in a bit of a huff, holding her belly through her summer dress in the elevator, but as the door closed,
I knew that she would come home feeling much better later. In the future, I told myself that I would
make sure she had more time off; this much stress was only bad for the baby, so if she needed any
time to rest and relax, then I would allow it.
However, Moana was late coming home that night. I began to get a little worried when she wasnât even
home in time for dinner, and found myself involuntarily looking out the window every five minutes to see
if she was coming.
Finally, just as I was about to call her, I saw the car pull up out front and let out a sigh of relief. I
watched as she walked into the building, then waited for her to take the elevator up. When the doors
finally slid open and she walked into the foyer, she immediately met my gaze.
âYou were out late,â I said. âI was about to call you.â
She shrugged. âItâs my day off. Iâm an adult, so you donât need to worry about me.â
For the second day in a row, Moana was being sarcastic and cold toward me. What did I do to piss her
off so much like this? Frowning, I folded my arms across my chest. âIâm allowed to wonder where the
mother of my baby is past dark in this big city,â I said.
Moana merely scoffed. âI was only at the orphanage,â she replied. âBesides, why do you care? Itâs not
your baby, right? Just some other manâs mistake?â
âSo thatâs what this is about?â I asked, splaying my hands out with my palms up, feeling incredulous.
âYou eavesdropped on my conversation with my mother?â
Moana rolled her eyes and began to storm off toward her room, but I wasnât having it. After all of the
waiting and worrying about her all night, I had finally had enough. I had been so understanding, and
even gave her an extra day off! Before she could storm away, I quickly ran up to her and put myself
between her and the doorway.
âDonât just run away,â I insisted. âHave a real conversation with me.â
She waved her hand dismissively. I noticed that she didnât seem to even want to look at me, and now
she turned around to storm off in the other direction, toward the kitchen. âItâs completely unimportant,â
she said. I followed her and watched as she walked to the fridge, opened it, then took out a pitcher of
iced tea and poured herself a glass. Her hands seemed to be shaking.
âDid you eat dinner?â I asked.
Moana scoffed again. âWhy do you care?â
âBecause,â I reiterated, âyou are carrying my child in your belly. Youâve hardly eaten for the past two
days. The last thing you, I, the baby, or anyone else needs is for you to collapse and wind up in the
hospital. I meanâ¦â I let out a wry, disbelieving chuckle. âWhat has gotten into you?â
âWhat has gotten into me?â Moana asked through gritted teeth. She slammed the pitcher back down in
the fridge, then turned toward me and pressed her palms firmly into the countertop. âFirst,â she said,
counting on her fingers now, âyou scrambled to pay off that photographer on the night we went out for
dinner. Then, you canât even be bothered to refer to me in any sort of personal way at the hospital until
we were behind closed doors, because it might tarnish your pristine reputation to be in association with
a lowly humanâ¦â
âMoana, thatâs notââ I began, but she cut me off.
âThatâs not even all of it!â she snarled. âYouâve done nothing but treat me with a hot and cold attitude
since you met me. One day, youâre sweet and kind and caring. Then, the next day, youâre distant and
canât even look me in the eye. The only reason why you even come close to treating me like an equal is
because of this baby, and I was willing to accept that! But then you canât even admit to your own
mother that the baby is yours? You have to make me out to be impregnated by another mystery man?
Donât you realize how that sounds?â
As she spoke, Moana absentmindedly stormed out of the kitchen and back into the living room. I
followed, partially listening to what she was saying, but also partially because I was worried she might
do something rash in her current angry state.
âYou know,â she said, her voice still raised, âI thought that you were really starting to see me as an
equal. I thought that our relationship was unconventional, but that it would be okay because you would
love our child, and that was all that mattered. But now, I think that our baby will only grow up feeling
even more alone than I do in this household. No other family members, no friends, having to constantly
fear cameras, and not even being accepted by his or her own father. Just money. Money canât fill the
void that parental love is supposed to fill!â
Suddenly, she picked up a pillow off of the couch in her fit of anger and chucked it as hard as she could
â not at me, but at the floor with a surprising amount of force for such a petite pregnant woman.
When she was finished, the room fell silent, filled only by the sounds of her breathing harshly through
her nostrils. We both stared incredulously at the discarded pillow; I had to stifle a bit of a smirk at the
ridiculousness of the situation and the comical choice of throwing a pillow on the floor. Even in a state
of fury, Moana was still level-headed enough to only throw something soft, rather than choosing
something heavy or breakable like so many angry people might choose.
When I lifted my gaze from the pillow, I looked into her eyes, only to see that they were filled with more
than just annoyance and anger⦠but rather a deep-seated pain and bitterness. I felt both cornered and
guilty; how could I explain to her that I was just put on the spot by my mother, and that I was planning
on announcing the baby to her in due time? She wouldnât even believe me anyway, and the longer I
thought about it, the more I realized that it was a weak excuse anyway. Maybe I was just being cruel by
claiming that the baby in Moanaâs belly belonged to a mystery man. Maybe I should have been a man
and admitted that the baby was mine.
At that moment, I knew I was wrong. And for some reason, I wanted to hold her. Without a word, I
walked past the discarded pillow and pulled her tightly into my arms.