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Her Mate's Secret Baby:Interstellar Brides, Book 9(16)

By:Grace Goodwin


I thanked her for lunch and grabbed the monitor, heading for my bedroom.  I had a stack of Noah's clothes in a basket on my bed, waiting to be  folded. Miranda, the maid, said she would do them for me, but I had  declined.

I liked to bury my nose in his little clothes, hold them to my face and  inhale the sweet baby scent of my son. He smelled like home to me. Like  love.

Walking out of the kitchen, I passed the adjoining room without even  glancing inside. I had no need to see the formal dining room where I'd  taken so many meals alone. The table beyond was long, polished mahogany,  and large enough to seat twenty. An elaborate chandelier hung low over  the center. The chairs were high-backed and stiff, just like my parents.

I wondered how they ever got down and dirty enough to have a child in  the first place. I couldn't fathom it. Perhaps I was the product of  in-vitro fertilization. I could imagine my mother in a sterile doctor's  office more than in the throes of passion, opening her body to her  lover, taking what he offered, demanding more.

And just like that, my thoughts went up in flames. Roark. Always, when  my mind drifted to my mate, my body would grow hot and needy, the ache  between my legs very real. But nothing compared to the immediate ache  that overtook my heart.

He was dead. He had to be. I'd waited for him for a long time, hoping.  Hope had kept me going through the pregnancy. Hope that he'd come for  me, as he'd promised. Hope that he'd survived the brutal Drover attack,  even after Warden Egara told me otherwise.

But days turned into weeks. Weeks turned into months, then a year. Our  son grew in my womb and came into the world, screaming and fighting. And  still, my mate was gone.

Warden Egara's inquiries turned up nothing new. Outpost Two was lost. No survivors.         

     



 

Roark was gone. Warden Egara said she could go to the Interstellar  Coalition, to someone called The Prime, on the planet Prillon, the guy  in charge of the whole Coalition, and ask for an exception for me and  Noah. Ask for another mate on Trion.

I didn't want another mate. My heart was broken enough. Roark had been  mine, my perfect match. My one true love. I'd felt the bond between us  instantly and I'd given him everything, heart and soul and body. I had  nothing left to give another mate. Noah was the only thing that mattered  to me now. I had nothing left for a new man. Nothing.

But, luckily, I didn't need a mate to survive. I didn't need, nor want  for, anything. When my parents heard about the baby, they'd deeded this  property to me within forty-eight hours. I had unlimited access to  multiple bank accounts filled with more money than I could spend in  three lifetimes. For me, they said. So I would be secure, they insisted.

But we all knew the truth.

The house wasn't in the heart of Boston, where my parents' main  residence was. The country home was more than a hundred miles outside  the city, with fresh air and horses and none of my parents' friends,  colleagues, country club acquaintances, or business associates within  miles. An illegitimate grandchild-and they'd not accepted my mating as a  true legal joining-was one thing.

An alien's offspring was another.

Better to keep me and little Noah-a grandchild they'd yet to meet-hidden  from the rest of the world. If I had all the money I needed, a place to  live, I wouldn't rock the boat. I wouldn't complain. I'd remain  invisible as I always had.

I hurried up the stairs, my bare feet and loose hair a freedom I'd given  myself since my time with Roark. My mother would not approve, insisting  shoes be worn at all times, unless one was in bed. But I no longer  cared what my mother thought, what she did or where she went. I only  cared about my son.

The upstairs hallway, once filled with vases and priceless works of art,  had been stripped bare on my orders. I'd spent a lifetime trying not to  touch anything, break anything, tiptoeing around my own home like an  invader.

Noah would not live that life. He was not yet four months old, but he  would be crawling soon, and I would make this house his playground.  Everything would be baby-proof and made safe for him to explore.

He would feel safe and comfortable. He would have the childhood I did not.

My bedroom was beautiful, the pale-cream-and-gold carpeting, the  chocolate-brown silk on my bed. A large canopy was draped in brown and  white, creating a protective cocoon for me to sleep in.

I walked to the edge and sat next to the laundry basket I'd left a few  hours ago. The scent of fabric softener and baby drifted to me, and I  smiled. A few steps away, the door to Noah's adjoining nursery stood  slightly ajar. Just a crack, but enough that I could hear his little  body rustling and moving as he woke from his nap.

Unable to resist, I went to him. His nursery was not the usual, animals  going two-by-two or big, cuddly bears. Noah was special, and I wanted  him to know where he came from.

Three walls were covered with stars and constellations. On the fourth,  just above his head, I'd paid an artist to paint Roark's symbols, the  crossed swords that represented Noah's father, and the symbol of his  family, in two matching shields.

The servants hadn't asked, and I didn't offer to explain. I'd taken  photos of the medallions that still dangled from the chain between my  breasts with a cell phone and given them to the painter when she  arrived.

The woman simply nodded and transformed the wall above Noah's crib into  both art and tribute in a dark, rich, gold-colored paint. Above his  sweet head hung a mobile of the sun and moon that played "Twinkle  Twinkle" when I pushed the button. Stored in my bedroom, in the  nightstand drawer, was everything I had been able to find on the planet  Trion. It wasn't much, but Warden Egara had helped, and I had photos of  his home world, of the people who looked like he did, with their  olive-toned skin, black hair and intense stares. I knew Noah would grow  up to be big like his father. He'd weighed nearly ten pounds when he was  born, and was so long he'd been lean despite the weight. He'd needed  extra feeding to keep up with his growth and I'd quickly embraced the  bottle as a way to feed his insatiable appetite.

Noah looked like his father, and yet he didn't. My son had thick black  hair and olive skin. But his eyes were mine. Dark blue when he was born,  instead of growing darker, as I'd expected, his eyes had grown paler by  the day, matching my pale blue. The contrast in his coloring was  striking already, and I knew, someday, I would be chasing girls away  from him and his exotic looks.         

     



 

But for now, he was mine. "Hey, big guy."

His eyes opened and he saw me. Just like that, he smiled, his chubby  little cheeks bunching and his eyes sparkling with unfiltered joy.

Love rushed through me, so strong and fierce I could barely contain it. I  reached for him, lifting him from his crib. I placed him on the  changing table, dealt with a wet diaper quickly. He kicked and fidgeted,  eager to get on with it as I laughed and blew raspberries on his soft  little belly.

These were the moments when I rejoiced in my time on Trion.

Late at night, alone in bed, I missed him still. My mate. Roark. Being with Noah brought a little of Roark into the room.

Determined not to ruin the day, I leaned over and pressed my lips to  Noah's soft belly again, blowing air in a loud, silly stream on his  petal-soft skin. He kicked and squealed, his chubby little fingers  brushing the bare skin of my stomach where he'd found an opening under  my soft cotton T-shirt. My jeans were comfortable and well worn, and  only one size larger than what I'd worn before. Not too bad.

I leaned over and made wild, growly noises as Noah squealed and kicked.

But then the fun stopped. Noah's hand wrapped around the gold chain that hung from my nipples and he tugged. Hard.

"Ouch!" With a chuckle, I lifted my shirt and found his chubby little  fist clutched around the medallion in the center, the one his father had  given me. "Let go, silly. That's not for you, baby. That belongs to  Mommy."

I pried his fingers from the medallion, one by one, but his grip was  surprisingly strong as he tried to pull the pretty, sparkling gold to  his mouth.

"Noah!" His eyes sparkled with innocent delight as he quickly shoved the  medallion into his mouth, fist and all, smothering the entire thing in  drool. Which just made prying individual fingers free of the thing  without hurting myself that much more difficult.

When I'd first arrived on Earth, I'd tried to remove the chain and the  rings. I'd tried pliers and wire cutters. Everything I could think of,  but nothing worked. Only surgery would remove them and I had no  intention of going there. After a month or two, I'd grown used to them.  Before Noah was born, it was my reminder of the short time I'd had with  Roark. Then Noah replaced the chain and its medallions as a token of  what we'd shared, for our love made him.

The chain remained my personal torment and pleasure, my one true connection to the man I'd loved and lost.

With infinite patience, and a strong desire not to have my nipples  yanked on like that again, I finally got the wet, drool-covered  medallion from his chubby little fingers.