Chapter 69 11 Gabriel.
Itâs me. Sofia. Baker.
Iâm sorry if Iâm intruding, but please donât discard this voicemail and hear me out.
When I left from your house, I never had any intention of coming back into your life or contacting you ever again. I donât want anything from you.
I.. Um, ever since I left, Iâve been sick. Even the week before that when my Grandpa passed, I... I was sick. I kept throwing up and feeling nauseous all the time and we both discarded it as my grief. It was, I think, but when I didnât get any better, I went to a doctor last week and she asked me to get a pregnancy test.
Any way, long story short, Iâm pregnant.
Iâm about ten weeks along, eleven now, I think. Thatâs a little over two months, just so you know. Itâs yours, just so you know, and itâs two of them. I havenât been with anyone except you in a very long time, but if you wish, we can get a paternity test or something.
I donât, Iâm not doing this to get anything from you. If youâve moved on and are happy in your life with... I guess what Iâm saying is, you donât have to be a part of this. I donât want anything from you, especially not your money. Iâm just letting you know so that, well, you know. Iâm keeping the babies.
Um. Yes. Thatâs it, I guess. Call me back when you can? This is my new number. Byeâ
I draw in a long breath, putting the copy of âwhat to expect when youâre in pregnantâ at the cashierâs desk, removing the last twenty dollar note in my bag and placing it on the book.
The cashier eyes me weirdly, and my cheeks flush. The note was folded and slightly crumpled, the kind it becomes when you leave it in your jeans pocket and forget about it for weeks.
I hadnât forgotten this note in my jeans pocket. I was just severely out of cash, and Iâd dug this one out from a corner of mas bag to put off going to the ATM and withdrawing money.
I knew I had to, if not today then tomorrow when the groceries of the house were due, but I wasnât prepared for the rea check and the inevitable need for me to get off my a*s and get a job.
I was going to get a job, even if only for the next two months which is when I shift back to my hometown. But I had to save both those paycheques if I wanted to rest at home in the third trimester and prepare for the babies. Not to forget the few months after the birth when I couldnât be working, but that was a problem for another day.
âYou pregnant?â The cashier at the bookstore, who I thought was immensely disinterested in me earlier asks, and I nod at the barely-twenty goth girl.
âCongrats.â She says, pulling out a bag from one of the drawers and putting the book inside it along with the bill. âYour change, $1.50. You want it or should I donate it?â
âOh. Uh. Sure.â I squirm watching her put the 1.50 into the little box on the side with a sticker of dogs over it.
There goes my bus money to get back home. Luckily, it was just a twenty minute walk, not much.
âNice ring.â The girlâs dark lips rise into a smile, and my eyebrows knit when my gaze falls to my wedding ring stit on my 1/3 T finger.
Oh. I hadnât even realised I was wearing it all these days.
âThanks.â I give her a right lipped smile and grab the bag from her, getting out of the store as fast as I can.
The air felt chilly again, and the sweater I was wearing did a very poor job in keeping me warm. I hadnât packed any coats in the one bag I had dumped with some things that came to my hand, but I sure as hell couldnât afford buying a new coat now.
Maybe I should start thrifting again. Even then, I wasnât sure I could afford buying a coat just because the weather decided to give a whiplash.
I checked my phone, something I had been doing every fifteen minutes since I sent Gabriel that voicemail in the morning. No new messages.
I sighed, and the little happiness I had about hearing from him again and the hope to get an explanation or some sort of closure fizzled down when I slept that night and there was still no word from him.
My sleep was disturbed at five on the dot when the rock guitarist had for a neighbour decided it was time to begin his daily practice, and made my way out to see a frowning Luna in the living room. âI donât like him,â she grumped, making her way to the bathroom after adding, âRest. I will be right out and make you breakfast for 3.â|
I sigh, and was just about to go back to my room when loud banging noise outside stopped me. I shouldnât have headed out as fast as I did, and a wave of disappointment greeted me when there was no one at my door.
Instead, someone was knocking on my neighbourâs door, and the brown haired guitarist with more tattoos than I could count on one hand made his way out looking frustrated.
âKeep it down, d*ckhead. Your neighbour is pregnant and she needs her rest. A familiar voice yelled at the man, whose eyes narrowed at me.
I shifted my weight to the other foot, all ready to denty being pregnant to avoid being in his anger-zone, but he just flashed me a small smile. âSorry. Iâll keep it down. And if you need anything or anyone bothers you, you can ask me for help any time.
âCan you flirt any less obviously?â The girl from the book store shakes her head at the man who rolls his eyes before shutting the door behind him.
âYou didnât have to do that.â I tell her, giving her a smile. âBut thank you.â
âSomeone needed to tell my brother his 5A.M. practices arenât making him the lead in any band any time soon.â She retu the ghost of a smile back.
âIâm Sophia,â I tell her, âWould you like to come in for some coffee?â
âIâm Maeve. My brother is Brown. And, maybe some other time. Iâm running late for class.â Brown gives me a dismissive nod kind of action and I awkwardly smile as I watch her curvy frame disappear into the stairs, heading down..
The guitarâs sound doesnât make its way to me any more, not the morning, and not any morning after that.
Maybe this place wasnât as bad after all.
I had considered all possibilities when I sent Gabriel that voicemail, ranging from him demanding a paternity test or not wanting to be emotionally involved, to him demanding full custody of the children when they were born (which Iâd probably hit him for and then kick him out). But in everything that I thought and imagined, him never reaching out wasnât one of them.