Erik
Christine was unpredictably emotional. She craved odd foods and suffered bouts of pitiable tears at the slightest provocation.
I learned to walk on eggshells around her, though playing the doting, concerned husband was not such a stretch. My anxiety increased with every passing day until I found myself secretly wishing I could return to substance; however, I stayed sane for Christine and the child's sakes.
The baby was due in only a few, short weeks. One afternoon, as Christine and I added the finishing touches to the nursery on the second floor, I heard her sigh and saw her rub her stomach absentmindedly. I recommended that she take a break.
She snapped a reply.
I knew she didn't intend to be cruel; her thoughts were occupied with weightier things.
Jeanette ambled into the room and handed Christine a mobile to hang above the ornate cradle. "It's a bit late to start looking, dear," she said, "but Maria knows a good wet nurse, a kind woman from the south who works for a reasonable fee."
"Give Maria our thanks, but we don't need a wet nurse," Christine replied, hanging the mobile with a definitive air.
"What?" Jeanette huffed. "But of course you must have one! It isn't proper for genteel young ladies to be feeding and tending to their own children!"
"Nevertheless, I shall."
Jeanette knew better than to argue with Christine once she had set her mind on something, especially with me in the room. So she exited with much muttering and a few backward glances at us.
I moved a bit closer to Christine. "Are you sure you don't want a nurse?" I asked. "We can certainly afford one if that is deterring you."
She shook her head. "No, in my day people take care of their own babies, and I would feel uncomfortable handing him or her to someone else." She stared at a random spot of the wall and touched a delicate hand to her forehead. "But maybe we should get one. I don't know if I can do this."
I pulled her into an embrace and felt her release a deep breath. She smelled faintly of a perfume I had recently bought her. I stroked the waves of hair that fell down her back, marveling even after all this time at the miracle that was her existence. "You are going to be a wonderful mother. Do not fret, my darling, my angel."
She pulled away from me and turned her head. "Don't call me 'angel.' I'm nothing otherworldly."
I turned her head gently back to face me. "Then what shall I call you?"
"I like being called yours." She smiled, and I noticed tears brimming in her eyes.
One welled over and trickled down her cheek, so I brushed it away. "Then you shall be mine." I kissed her forehead. "Though you must be an angel, for nothing less could have saved me."
Christine kissed me until I forgot everything but her. It did not take long.
...
Christine
Meg and her mother came to visit, and as I led them to the parlor for our usual round of tea, Mme Giry pulled Erik aside so that Meg and I could speak with some privacy.
Meg sat next to me on a loveseat. "How long until the baby will be born?" she asked right away.
I smiled fondly and touched the lump that was my stomach. "A week or two," I answered. I was big enough that walking took effort and I hardly ever saw my feet. "I'm certainly ready for this to be over. My back and shoulders ache!" I rolled them to demonstrate. "But I know that my current discomfort will soon be replaced by others."
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Between Mirrors and Roses (A Phantom of the Opera Fanfiction) ✓
FanfictionThe life of an ordinary girl is turned upside down when she is transported into her favorite musical, "The Phantom of the Opera," in the place of the elegant heroine. Negotiating life in 19th-century Paris is challenging enough without a diva schemi...