What you call the "special continuum hypothesis" (NOTE: this term does not appear anywhere I can find; the abbreviation "SCH" refers to the "Singular Cardinal Hypothesis," a quite different statement) does not imply choice.
First of all, note that even the full continuum hypothesis - "Every infinite set which is not countable, admits an injection from $\mathbb{R}$" - does not imply AC. This is because we can have a failure of AC "high up" the set-theoretic hierarchy, so that it just has nothing to do with the reals, at all.
More interestingly perhaps, the "special continuum hypothesis" does not even imply that $\mathbb{R}$ is well-ordered! For example, the Axiom of Determinacy proves that there is no set of reals of intermediate cardinality, but also proves that $\mathbb{R}$ cannot be well-ordered.
What is true is that the Generalized Continuum Hypothesis implies AC: see Question about Generalized Continuum Hypothesis. This is a result of Sierpinski.