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After My Guardian Found Out I’m Carrying His Child Novel Cover

After My Guardian Found Out I’m Carrying His Child

I bought the dress for the gala three weeks in advance. A deep navy slip dress, simple and clean, nothing like the architectural gowns the other women would wear. I stood in the boutique dressing room and thought about Alexander's face when he saw it. Whether his eyes would do that thing — that half-second pause before he looked away. They did. He was waiting by the elevator when I came downstairs, already in his tux, already composed. Alexander Knight was always composed. Thirty-one years old, six feet of controlled authority, the kind of man who made a room rearrange itself around him without trying. He looked at me and something moved behind his eyes — quick, contained, gone. "You look nice," he said.
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Chapter 3

Jazlyn called it proof.

She sat cross-legged on my bed the morning after, replaying the whole thing like a highlight reel — his hands on my face, the three missed calls, the way he'd looked at me before he remembered Valeria was standing in the doorway.

'That's not how a guardian looks at his ward,' she said. 'That's not even how a brother looks at a sister. That's a man who is terrified of losing you.'

'He was worried,' I said. 'That's what he does. He worries about me.'

'Evie.'

'Jazlyn.'

She gave me the look. The one that meant she had already decided and was waiting for me to catch up.

I stared at my tea.

Maybe she was right. Maybe the hands and the pulse check and the thumb against my cheekbone meant something I had spent seven years refusing to read. Maybe I had been translating his silences wrong this whole time.

Or maybe I was a twenty-two-year-old girl who had been in love with the same man since she was fifteen and would find evidence of it in anything if she looked hard enough.

I texted him that afternoon. *Coffee tomorrow? Washington Square?*

He replied in four minutes. *Ten o'clock.*

I told myself it was just coffee.

---

The café near Washington Square had been ours for years. Not in any way I was allowed to say out loud — just ours in the way that certain places become attached to certain people without ceremony. We'd been coming here since I started at NYU. He would order black coffee and I would order something with too much milk and we would sit by the window and talk about everything except the things that mattered.

He was already there when I arrived. Of course he was. Alexander Knight was always early.

He looked up when I came in and something in his face settled, the way it always did when he located me in a room. Like a small, private exhale.

I sat down across from him and wrapped both hands around my cup.

'I need to tell you something,' I said.

He waited. That was one of his qualities I had never been able to decide if I loved or hated — the absolute patience of him. He never rushed me. He just held the space open and let me walk into it.

'There's someone,' I said carefully. 'Someone I have feelings for. And I know I shouldn't. I know it's — complicated. And I don't know what to do with it.'

I watched his face. He was very still.

'I keep thinking if I just ignore it long enough it'll go away,' I said. 'But it doesn't. It's been a long time and it doesn't go away.'

I was watching his eyes. I saw the moment he understood. It moved through him like a current — a tightening around his jaw, something shifting behind his eyes that he locked down almost immediately.

Almost.

'Evie.' His voice was quiet. Careful. The voice he used when he was choosing every word. 'I've made a commitment to Valeria. And I intend to honor it.'

The café was warm. Someone's espresso machine hissed. Outside, a dog was barking at a pigeon.

'Right,' I said.

I laughed. It came out easy, light, exactly the way I needed it to. 'I was testing you, actually. Making sure she's good enough.' I waved a hand. 'You passed. Very honorable. Very you.'

He looked at me for a long moment. His eyes didn't move.

'Evie —'

'I should go,' I said. 'I have a thing.' I stood up and grabbed my bag and smiled at him, the smile I had been perfecting for months. 'Tell Valeria I said hi.'

I made it six blocks before I stopped walking.

I stood on the corner of Bleecker and leaned against a mailbox and pressed the back of my hand against my mouth and cried. Not loudly. Not for long. Just enough to let some of the pressure out so I could keep moving.

Then I kept moving.

---

I graduated on a Thursday in May.

The ceremony was at Yankee Stadium, which felt appropriately enormous for the occasion of my life changing shape. I walked across the stage in my cap and gown and heard my name called and thought about my parents, the way I always did at moments like this — a quick, clean ache, there and gone.

Alexander was in the front row.

I spotted him before I spotted anyone else. He was in a dark suit, no tie, and he was watching me with an expression I had never seen on him in seven years. Not the careful attention. Not the managed warmth. Something unguarded and direct and so concentrated that the woman sitting next to him actually turned to look at what he was staring at.

I looked away first.

Afterward, he took me to the West Village. My favorite restaurant, the small Italian place on Commerce Street with the candles in wine bottles and the pasta that took forty minutes and was worth every second. He ordered the tiramisu before I could ask for it.

Then he put a book on the table.

First edition. The novel I had written my entire senior thesis on, the one I had mentioned once, in passing, two years ago. He had found a first edition.

'Alexander.' My voice came out wrong.

'You earned it,' he said simply.

I held the book and looked at him across the candlelight and thought: *tell him*. Tell him right now. Tell him about the morning after the gala, about the earring you left behind, about the thing growing quietly inside you that you haven't told anyone yet, not even Jazlyn.

He was watching me with that look again. The unguarded one.

I set the book down carefully. 'I'm moving out,' I said.

The look closed.

'My parents' old place in Brooklyn,' I said. 'I need to — I need to start my actual life. I need my own space.'

His jaw tightened. 'That neighborhood —'

'Is fine.'

'The building doesn't have a doorman.'

'I don't need a doorman.'

'Evie —'

'Alexander.' I met his eyes. 'I need this.'

He looked at me for a long time. Something moved across his face that I couldn't name and didn't let myself try.

'Three days,' he said finally. 'I'll help you move on Saturday.'

He carried every box up four flights of stairs without a word of complaint. He assembled the bed frame I had bought secondhand. He checked the window locks twice. When he was done, he stood in the middle of my small, bare living room and looked around at it with an expression I turned away from.

Before he left, he set his spare key on my kitchen counter.

He didn't ask if I wanted it. He didn't say anything at all.

I stood in the doorway and watched him walk down the stairs and listened to his footsteps until I couldn't hear them anymore.

Then I went inside and sat on the floor with my back against the wall and pressed both hands flat against my stomach.

I had a secret I was running out of time to keep.

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