Chapter 638
Chapter 138 : He’s Dead
*Lena*
Two Weeks Later
Mom huffed out a breath, a garment clip clamped between her teeth as she fussed with the back of the fluffy white dress I was wearing. I grunted in response, looking into the full-length mirror at my reflection.
The dress was only tight around my breasts and fluffed out over my body in a “baby-doll” style that suited the growing swell of my belly to the point that it was hard to tell I was even pregnant. Silky puffy sleeves tapered off at my wrists.
“I look like a cream puff,” I laughed, glancing at Mom over my shoulder.
She rolled her eyes, shaking her head as she bent back down to her task of fitting my now incredibly large breasts into the dress, once again.
“I like cream puffs,” Elaine said from the sofa on the other side of the airy, brightly colored sitting room in Castle Drogomor, her legs crossed on the coffee table.
Clare snorted with mirth as she flipped through Maeve’s huge leather-bound spell book that was sitting on her lap.
Sasha was skipping from one side of the room to the other, humming a little song as she pranced. Clare and Sasha were settled in Winter Forest but had come down for the wedding, which was taking place in three weeks. Clare seemed happy to be here early, and she quickly fell in step with Elaine, the two of them becoming fast friends.
I was a little jealous of that, especially since Clare still seemed skeptical of me, for whatever reason.
I chalked it up to her personality, which was probably the truth. She was just a grumpy, somewhat cold person.
Elaine, on the other hand, was back to being a ray of sunshine. I still couldn’t believe she was here. And I was glad that she was because it was all hands on deck. The wedding preparations were in full swing, the date set for the summer solstice itself.
Mom put the last garment clip in place and leaned back to examine her work, nodding at herself as she made me turn in a circle.
“I’ll have to take it out again before the wedding,” she said, more to herself than to me.
“It’s beautiful, Mom,” I assured her as I raised my arms towards the ceiling on her command so she could see how the fabric fell.
“Are you going to wear a veil?” Elaine asked, flipping through a wedding magazine.
Clare frowned at her, shaking her head. “She needs to wear a crown; she’s a princess after all.”
“I hadn’t thought that far–”
“Well, you should have,” Clare said leaning back into the couch cushions. “You have like, twenty days until the wedding.”
I waved my hand at her in dismissal as Mom turned me back toward the mirror.
“I think I’m going to wear my hair up,” I told Mom, but then I noticed the tears glistening in her eyes. “Mom? What’s the matter?”
“You’re just–oh, honey. You’re so beautiful–”
“Please don’t cry,” I begged, tears beginning to well in my own eyes. I’d been a mess of emotions the past two weeks since we returned from Crimson Creek. Reality was setting in, and I found myself crying over the smallest things. Only this morning I’d cried over a pair of the tiniest socks I’d ever seen in my life while sorting through the baby clothes I’d purchased. Xander had been so confused, and had resorted to patting the top of my head while I dissolved into a puddle of tears on the carpet, the socks clutched in my hands.
“I’m just so happy–”
“Lena looks like a snow fairy!” Sasha shouted from the other side of the room, and we all turned around to look at her.
“Sasha!” Clare exclaimed, rising from the couch.
I tried not to laugh as Clare stalked over to her daughter, who had climbed one of the bookshelves and was reaching for a vase, her tiny fingers splayed in determination.
I heard male voices in the hallway, and suddenly the door to the sitting room began to open.
“STOP!” Mom cried, and whoever was behind the door halted their progress.
“Xander will stay in the hallway,” Dad said quickly, and behind the door I heard Xander’s muffled protest as Dad pushed him away before he slid into the room.
Dad walked in, shutting the door firmly behind me, then his eyes landed on mine.
“Wow,” he said, a wry smile touching his mouth.
I narrowed my eyes at him. “Wow? That’s all you have to say?”
“You look like–”
“A cream puff?” Elaine snorted.
Dad let out his breath in a whoosh, shaking his head. “You look beautiful, Lena. You really do.”
“If you’re only here to tease me,” I said firmly as Mom began to stick pins along the back of the dress to mark where she needed to adjust the fit of the dress, “then go away!”
“I’m just here to deliver the RSVPs to your wedding coordinators,” he said with a shrug, then tossed a pile of envelopes on the couch next to Elaine. “I can take Sasha off your hands, as well,” he said to Clare, who was red in the face as she tried to pry Sasha off the bookshelf. Sasha, who had been whining and holding on to the bookcase for dear life, immediately let go and fell back into her mother’s arms, then squirmed to get away.
“I want to go outside!” she practically screamed.
“Well, that’s perfect. Xander and I are going to have lunch in the front garden–”
“No climbing trees, Sasha. Those tights are new!” Clare protested, but Dad and Sasha were already at the door.
Sasha turned around and stuck her tongue out at her mom before slipping outside, and Dad gave her an apologetic glance before he left as well, shutting the door behind him.
Clare ran her hands over her face as she rounded the couch, plopping down on top of the envelopes Elaine was hurrying to gather. “She’s been such a handful lately.”
“She’s only five,” Mom smiled. “She’ll grow out of it.”
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: Sold as the Alpha King's Breeder
Yeah sorry full of crap clichés skipping chapters...
Really oh fn....off another weak heroine roll, her pack hated her, she was abused, why would she do this .... pfghhj off at another cliche novel. .... Nope...