Fortunately, Alice didn’t keep her husband waiting too long, and was pushed out by doctors and nurses.
“Wife.” Clive was the first to pounce.
Alice’s hair was messy and her lips were bitten.
Fortunately, she was in good spirits. Seeing everyone waiting for her, she said to her husband: “Clive, it’s a son. They said the baby looks like me.”
Clive said, “The son just follows his mother. That’s great, the baby is very good.”
Clive leaned down, kissed his beloved wife on the forehead, and said distressedly: “Wife, thank you for your hard work, we won’t have any more children in the future, one child is enough.”
Lafayette family also hoped that Alice would give birth to a son.
The Stone family had a great business, and Clive also said that he would only have one child. Alice was the eldest daughter-in-law. The Lafayette family felt that if Alice gave birth to the eldest grandson, she would give birth to a successor for her husband’s family, so Alice’s position in the Stone family would be stable.
After giving birth, Alice was also glad that she gave birth to a son so that her baby would not have to bear the pain of childbirth like she did when he grew up.
Alice replied: “Okay, I won’t give birth.”
She didn’t want to give birth either, it hurt too much!
If she hadn’t experienced it, she couldn’t imagine the pain.
Back in the delivery room, Alice was resting on the bed, watching everyone watching the baby. She said to her husband: “Bring the baby over here and let me see it too.”
This was her tenth month of pregnancy, and she had gone through ten levels of pregnancy. She hadn’t seen enough of the little guy born in pain.
In the delivery room, after the baby was born, it was cleaned up. The nurse held the baby for her to see, and asked her to kiss the baby before going out with the baby.
Clive immediately bent down and picked up the baby from the crib. It was just a newborn baby. It was small and soft and felt weightless in his hands. Clive held it very carefully.
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: Love at first sight novel (Judith Cooper)