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Look After You Series Box Set
Look After You Series Box Set Read online
Look After You box set
Copyright © 2019 Elena Matthews
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without the written permission of the author, except where permitted by law.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Thank you for downloading the Look After You series box set. Before you start reading, I just wanted to let you know of a few things.
The third book in the series, Look After Us, cannot be read as a standalone. You must read Look After You first. Look After Me (Look After You #2) can be read a standalone but I highly recommend reading the series in order.
The Series reading order
Look After you
Look After Me
Look After Us
Bonus epilogues
In both Look After You and Look After Me, I have included never-before seen bonus epilogues that are only available with this box set.
Now, I’ll let you get on with the important part of this box set… Reading it. :)
I hope you enjoy it!
Love, Elena xoxo
Contents
Copyright
Author Note
Look After You
Dedication
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Epilogue
Bonus Epilogue
Look After Me
Copyright
Dedication
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Epilogue
Bonus Epilogue
Look After Us
Copyright
Author Note
Dedication
Quote
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Epilogue
The story after the epilogue…
About the author
Also by Elena
Connect with Elena
Copyright © 2014 Elena Matthews
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without the written permission of the author, except where permitted by law.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Cover design by ©Sarah Hansen, Okay Creations.
Edited by Jennifer Roberts-Hall
To my grandma who passed away on the 29th May 2013.
And to my beautiful niece, Caitlin, NICU miracle baby, born thirteen weeks premature, who fought and survived. My little superhero …
Two pounds, two ounces. That’s how much my baby girl weighed when she was born.
Ten hours ago.
This wasn’t supposed to happen yet. I was supposed to have another thirteen weeks of pregnancy before I gave birth to my baby. I was supposed to have her nursery painted in pink with teddy bears surrounding the walls, her crib assembled with gorgeous soft blankets. I was supposed to have a baby shower, being showered with gifts and guessing the size of my baby. I was supposed to have time to come up with a name or at least discuss the possibility of names with my boyfriend. I was supposed to work up until my maternity leave, have at least a month of waddling around like a penguin and complaining about back pain or Braxton Hicks contractions.
I wasn’t supposed to give birth to her by C-section ten hours ago without my birthing partner and my boyfriend. Without any warning. Without understanding why my body had decided it wasn’t fucking good enough to carry my baby full term. Without having her in my arms like most other moms do the minute their baby is born.
Without…
Without…
Without…
A nurse is wheeling me into the neonatal intensive care unit to see my baby girl. This is the second time I’ll get to see her since she was born. Well, the first time didn’t even last ten seconds before she was immediately taken away from me so the doctors could work on her breathing and get her ventilated. I couldn’t believe how small she was, but she was a baby, a real life baby with ten fingers and ten toes.
My baby.
Since the moment I took that pregnancy test, she was a tiny thing inside of me, just a little blip. A couple of months later she was bigger than a blip, a bump, but I never really thought of her as a baby until I actually laid eyes on her beautiful face. Does that make me a terrible mother? I feel like one. I wasn’t ready, and I should have been. I should have been prepared for this, but I was so naïve about the preterm side of pregnancy and birth that it hadn’t even crossed my mind. But why should it have? Every parent hopes and wishes for the perfect pregnancy with zero complications and for the perfect baby. Nobody ever contemplates the worst possible pregnancy outcome until it actually happens to you.
The only thing that had worried me was the morning sickness, and surprisingly that hadn’t really bothered me. God, I would do anything to swap giving birth to my premature baby with fucking morning sickness. Anything.
The nurse continues to wheel me through the NICU hallway, which consists of clinical white walls and huge glass windows that lead into the NICU rooms. There are so many incubators, each holding small and sick babies attached to tiny oxygen tubes, high dependency medical equipment and monitors.
I’m a little shocked. Considering this is a specialized ward for small and sick babies, I was expecting it to be full of crying babies and frantic doctors and nurses running around, but it’s quiet, tranquil even, with the exception of the constant beeping sounds I can hear in the background.
My eyes start to fill up with panicked tears when we finally come to a stop at a pair of double doors. The nurse moves to stand in front of me with a sad smile and retrieves a small bottle of sanitizer from her pocket. She puts a small amount into my palm and I massage the liquid into my hands, ensuring every inch of skin has been covered.
br /> “Okay, before we go inside I need to warn you that when you see your daughter it will be a shock, but you have to remember that the tubes you see are there to save her life, they will not harm her. The sounds from the machines are alarming at first, but you’ll get used to them after a while.” She pauses briefly before asking, “Are you ready?”
She looks to me, expecting some type of verbal response, but all I can do is sob. She pushes me through the double doors and wheels me to my baby girl. Even though the nurse just warned me about what I would see, it doesn’t stop me from slamming my hands over my mouth in shock.
“I know, sweetheart. I know it’s upsetting,” she whispers softly while placing her hand to my back, patting me gently against my hospital gown.
Upsetting? Is this woman serious? This is the worst moment of my life.
I continue to quietly sob as I take in every detail of my daughter. She’s so tiny … she can’t be much bigger than the size of my hand. She is naked except for the diaper that covers nearly every inch of her small body. Her body looks almost transparent; you can see the network of blood vessels underlining her skin. She is on her back, one of her tube covered arms flat beside her tiny body, and the other arm is bent with her little hand covering her face. That arm is covered with a bandage, a white foam board holding it horizontal. She has a breathing tube in her mouth with strapping that sits just below her nose and across her cheeks, keeping the tube in place. I look down her body and notice she has two blue pads with tubes coming out placed on her protruding chest and two separate long thin tubes coming from her belly button.
The nurse holds out a box of tissues in front of me. I smile up to her sadly as I accept a tissue and begin to wipe my eyes.
“I’m sorry, I must look such a mess,” I mumble mid-sob.
“It’s okay, sweetheart. I can’t even begin to imagine what you must be going through. Would you like a glass of water?”
I can only nod, the lump in my throat restricting my speech. She holds out a plastic cup of water and I immediately start chugging it. After a couple of minutes, I begin to calm down and the rational side of me slowly returns.
“Sorry … I … this … it’s just a bit of a shock,” I say, feeling overwhelmed with my surroundings and the sight of my daughter. The nurse nods politely at me.
“I understand. It is very daunting. Let me give you a run down, it might ease your nerves a little. The tube you see in her mouth is called an endotracheal tube, and that is attached to the ventilator. It helps blow supplementary oxygen gently into her lungs. Because your baby is undeveloped and immature, she becomes tired and stops breathing more easily, so the ventilator support is essential at this stage as it takes the pressure off her. “The ventilator gives two types of pressures that help her to breathe. The PIP, which stands for Peak Inspiratory Pressure, inflates the lungs, and the PEEP, which stands for Positive End Expiratory Pressure, helps keep her lungs open and prevents them from collapsing.”
She pauses for a brief moment before proceeding. “Did the doctor explain how your daughter has Infant Respiratory Distress Syndrome?” I nod, remembering the conversation I had with a neonatologist earlier in the evening. “She was given surfactant replacement in her lungs within the first two hours of her life and her lung capacity has improved dramatically. It is likely she won’t need the power of the ventilator for much longer.”
I gasp in shock. “Will she be able to breathe on her own?” I frown at the realization of that. Surely that can’t be right. “I mean she’s still so tiny.”
“No. She will still need consistent help with her breathing during her development. When her lungs are strong enough not to need the strength of the ventilator we will put her onto the CPAP, which stands for Continuous Positive Airway Pressure.” I nod as I allow the information to sink in.
“You see the monitor to your left?” I glance over to a vital sign monitor and notice how the lines continuously move across the screen. “That monitors her heart and respiratory rate, pulse, blood pressure and oxygen saturations. As you can see, she has two umbilical lines coming from her navel.”
She opens up the door to the portholes of the incubator, then places her hands within the small space and gently takes apart my daughter’s diaper. She points to two individual umbilical lines. “One is an umbilical arterial catheter which measures arterial blood pressure and allows arterial blood sampling. The second line is an umbilical venous catheter where she is given the intravenous fluids and medication.”
The nurse follows her finger along another wire that is passed through the nose. “And this line here is a nasogastric feeding tube. The thin tube is passed up the nose, down the esophagus and into the stomach. At the moment she isn’t strong enough to feed through conventional methods, so she will be given her nutrition and oral medication through this tube until she is strong enough for the breast or bottle.”
I stare at my daughter, dumbfounded at all of the information I’ve had to take in, in such a short amount of time. I feel even more overwhelmed than I did when I first walked in. It’s all too much. Panic begins to squeeze heavily against my chest, and it makes it almost impossible for me to breathe as more tears continue to run down my face.
How did this fucking happen? I took all of the vitamins, did the regular yoga, everything that I was advised to do. I didn’t even indulge in a glass of wine for Christ’s sake. I was the perfect mother to be. How could this have happened?
“This is all my fault, but I don’t understand how, I did everything right … I did everything right … I don’t understand ...” I gasp as sobs wrack through me. I continue to fight for each breath I take and through my panic I grip tightly to my gown, clenching it through with my fingers, trying to gasp for air, grasping for something, anything.
The nurse kneels down beside me and places her hand against my arm with her gentle touch. “Oh, sweetheart, this isn’t your fault. You can’t blame yourself. Your baby needs you to be strong. She needs her mommy. Do you hear me? I understand how upsetting this is but you need to focus on the fact that she is here and fighting for her life. She is in the best place at the moment. Of course, it’s no womb, but we are definitely the next best thing. Just have faith. We are doing everything in our power to keep her alive,” she says with a quiet hush.
Surprisingly, I begin to calm down. “Okay. Strong. Best place. Have faith. I can do that,” I say, repeating the words as a chanting mantra through my head, over and over again. When I look at the nurse, I notice she’s staring directly at me, awaiting an answer. “I’m sorry, did you say something?”
“Would you like to be alone with your daughter, Ava?”
“Yes, please. Thank you.”
I watch my daughter in awe, taking in her delicate little hands as they slowly stretch, changing direction trying to get into a comfortable position. Once I’m alone, I wheel myself closer to her. My breath catches as her little toes wriggle slightly, and she kicks her legs out to the side. This happens a few more times before she finds a comfortable position and stills. She looks so peaceful, so fragile, but at the same time strong. I can see that she is already a little fighter, and it’s breathtaking.
“Hey, baby,” I whisper. I’m not quite sure if she can hear me or not but that doesn’t stop me from talking. “I’m your momma. You’ve put me through a lot during the past sixteen hours, baby girl, but that’s okay. I’m sorry, baby. I wish more than anything that you were still inside of me, keeping you safe, but it’s okay. We can make it work. I’ve tried to call Daddy, but he’s fighting the bad guys so you won’t get to meet him for a while yet. He’ll be devastated that he missed this.”
I bite down on my bottom lip and force the tears back, contemplating where her daddy is right now. I already knew he wouldn’t be here for the birth, but it still kills me that he doesn’t know his daughter has been born. I am unable to gain strength of my tears and the vicious circle of crying begins.
Sebastian is on a nine-month tour in Afghanistan
. It’s his third tour. He is a front line infantry officer. He has been there for four months already, so I still don’t get to see him for another five months. That’s five months without seeing his daughter. It was hard to accept when I thought he would be away for the first two months of her life, but now it’s even worse. It feels like a life sentence. I just wish I didn’t have to do this alone, without him. I miss him so damn much. I need him desperately. I called the American Red Cross earlier on, and they are currently trying to relay a message to Sebastian over in Afghanistan, but they told me it could take between twenty-four to forty-eight hours. I hate how I have to wait, but I don’t have any other choice. It isn’t as if I can call him on his cell. I’m lucky if I get to speak to him once a week and even then it’s brief.