You’re welcome! Alrighty. That makes sense, but you can still keep Maverick as the MC while also giving Delilah a presence. It’s just a matter of wording, like what I was saying about ‘she’ in Sentence 3. ‘She’ is a vague word, so it needs direction from the previous sentence(s) to give the proper context. Sentence 2 currently doesn’t give a clear enough distinction to let the reader know who ‘she’ is, so it becomes confusing as to whether Maverick is lovingly looking at his daughter or admiring the nurse while completely ignoring his daughter.
For the tenses bit, past tense is an action that has already happened, while present tense is something that is happening. Sentence 2 has words such as grasped and placed. Those are the past tense version of those words, because they’ve already happened. Since they are the primary verbs of the sentence, it makes the entire thing basically past tense. However, Sentence 3 has She’s and he’s. The way the sentence is structured, she’s could be either past or present tense (‘she was’ or ‘she is’ respectively). But, because of he’s (which can only be ‘he has’), it makes the sentence present tense because “she was/is the most beautiful thing he has ever seen” is still present tense no matter the outcome. If you change he’s to he’d, it would become past tense (“he has” to “he had”). Also, attempts is the present tense version of the word (“attempted” is the past tense).
Example 1
Delilah Nicole Mitchell was born on a snowy spring night at 6 lbs 8 oz, screaming her arrival to the cold, bright world. After wrapping Delilah in a bundle of blankets, the nurse handed her over to Maverick. He gingerly took her from the nurse, instinctively bringing her closer to his chest as he looked down at her. She was the most beautiful thing he’d ever seen—red-faced, her tiny limbs flailing as she attempted to burrow into him.
(This example splits Sentence 2 and changes everything to past tense. It also clearly indicates where the baby is and who Maverick is thinking about. For more distinction with the tenses in Sentence 3, I also turned She’s to She was to clearly indicate which tense it’s supposed to be. She’s can still be used, as it’s still correct wording, but it’s slightly easier to understand the tense by distinguishing it. Also, I missed this initially, but Sentence 1 was present tense because of the “is” in it. Turning it to “was” makes it past tense so it matches)
Example 2
Delilah Nicole Mitchell was born on a snowy spring night at 6 lbs 8 oz, screaming her arrival to the cold, bright world. After wrapping Delilah in a bundle of blankets, the nurse handed her over to Maverick. He gingerly took her from the nurse, instinctively bringing her closer to his chest as he looked down at her.
She is the most beautiful thing I have ever seen—red-faced, her tiny limbs flailing as she attempts to burrow into me.
(This example is an alternate of Example 1, with two paragraphs and a distinction between actions and thoughts. Though, I did accidentally forget to mention that introducing actual thoughts means changing the thoughts to first-person)
Example 3
Delilah Nicole Mitchell is born on a snowy spring night at 6 lbs 8 oz, screaming her arrival to the cold, bright world. The nurse wraps Delilah in a bundle of blankets and holds her out to Maverick. He gingerly grasps her, looking down at her as he instinctively brings her closer to his chest.
She is the most beautiful thing he's ever seen—red-faced, her tiny limbs flailing as she attempts to burrow into him. He could hold her in his arms forever and be happy.
(This example is completely present tense as a comparison to the other examples. Because of the present tense, changing the perspective between Sentences 2 and 3 becomes slightly more jarring, so I made it into a second paragraph to smooth the transition from actions to thoughts. I also turned She’s to She is as a better distinction between tenses like in the other examples. I also added the very last sentence to kind of better illustrate how Paragraph 2 is thought-driven compared to the action-driven Paragraph 1, though you can, obviously, discard it if you wish, lol)