3ish years laterâ¦
Of my twenty-three years on this planet, this has got to be one of the most embarrassing moments Iâve had.
My hands tug at the denim, but it wonât budge. âUgh!â
âWhatâs wrong, Tink?â Tyler walks around the corner, toweling off his wet hair. Heâs wearing nothing but black boxer briefs, and even though we just showered together, his lean, toned body briefly distracts me from my predicament.
Iâm standing in the middle of our walk-in closet trying to get dressed. Emphasis, trying. The jeans Iâve been living in for the past two months are suddenly several sizes too small. I got a little overzealous trying to force them up, and now theyâre stuck halfway up my thighs.
Thatâs right. Iâm trapped in my pants. It looks every bit as ridiculous as it sounds.
âCan you help me?â I gesture to myself. âI donât want to lose my balance trying to get these off.â
Itâs a valid concern given how clumsy Iâve been this pregnancy. Over the past few months, Iâve broken two phones, sprained my big toe, and spilled Chanel Rouge Noir nail polish all over our off-white carpet. I also shattered a glass yesterday when I turned around and knocked it off the counter with my belly.
A smile emerges across his lips and he sets aside his towel, walking over to me. He scoops me up effortlessly, carrying me to our bed. If he notices my weight gain, he doesnât let on. Heâs been amazing in a number of other ways during this journey, including holding my hair back through morning sickness, tolerating my weird cravings, and humoring my aversionsâeven when I had to ban coffee from the apartment for a month because the very smell of it made me sick.
âThis is ridiculous,â I mutter. âWhat would I have done if you werenât home?â
He chuckles, gently lowering me to sit on the edge of the mattress. âWeâll get a chair for the closet.â
âIâm officially boycotting denim.â
âAlso a valid solution.â Kneeling in front of me, he gently peels the jeans down my thighs and sets them next to me on the bed. He cups my belly, his warm palms molding around the curve. âYouâre beautiful.â
I glance down at his hands resting on my bare stomach. They used to eclipse my bump, but my bump is rapidly catching up.
Pregnancy symptoms hit me early and havenât subsided. Six months in, I have to pee constantly, Iâm exhausted but I canât sleep, chicken tastes weird, and now that Iâm past the morning sickness stage, I have killer heartburn. According to the internet, that means our baby is going to have a full head of hair, but thatâs little consolation when I have to sleep upright.
I might be a little cranky, too. Just a tad.
âIâm enormous.â
âYouâre supposed to get bigger, Ser.â Tyler caresses the swell of my skin with his thumbs, planting a kiss above my navel. âI love your belly. Thatâs my baby in there.â
Itâs hard to stay cranky when he says things like that.
He reaches past me and grabs the tub of mango belly butter off the nightstand, unscrewing the lid. I heave a sigh of relief as he rubs a dab into my skin, instantly relieving the dry, itchy skin thatâs been plaguing me lately.
I run my fingers through his still-damp hair. âThank you.â
âAlways.â As he moves on to the other half of my belly, I scan the array of tattoos inked into his upper body, zeroing in on the Tinker Bell artfully blended into the rest of his sleeve. Sheâs been drawn to look like me. He got it when we were apart during my fourth year of college, and he picked the left side so it would be closer to his heart.
Itâs even harder to stay cranky when I remember that.
My gaze travels lower, to the list of dates etched along his lower ribs on the same side. My birthday. The date we met. The date we moved in together permanently after I graduated. And a blank space below for all the milestones to come.
âI love you.â My chest pulls tight as tears spring to my eyes. Iâm so lucky. I couldnât have asked for a better life partner. We just got back from a babymoon in Greece, and Iâm more in love with him than ever.
Welcome to pregnancy. Itâs an emotional smorgasbord.
âI love you. Both of you.â He plants another kiss on the top of my belly, then one on my cheek. Pushing to stand, he offers me his hand to help me up. While not strictly necessary, itâs definitely appreciated. âLetâs finish getting dressed and go for a walk, wifey. Some fresh air will do you good.â
Though we might as well be married, technically weâre not engaged yet. Itâs my fault; I said I didnât want to plan a wedding in the midst of a pregnancy and a move. I regret it now because house hunting has been a total bust.
Heading back into the closet, I pick out a stretchy black maternity dress. Thereâs less chance Iâll get trapped in it laterâbut with the way my luck is going, itâs still a possibility.
The elevator brings us down to the ground floor, and we step out onto the street, greeted by warm spring air and the noise of New York City. I love it here; the cars, the noise, the chaos. Something about it makes me feel alive.
Tyler threads his fingers through mine, steering me on a now-familiar route through our neighborhood. We start near our favorite deli, pass the yoga studio I attend several days a week and approach the only drycleaners he trusts with his custom suits. On the far side of the block is Lilyâs Ice Cream, which Iâve frequented an embarrassing number of times since we moved to the area.
Sadness glimmers within me as I steal a glance down the street. âIâm still bummed about losing that place.â
After months of searching, we finally found the perfect place a few weeks ago. A sprawling brownstone over twice the size of our current apartment. Five bedrooms, four bathrooms, tons of living space. I have an entire Pinterest board full of inspiration saved for it, including the exact shade of pink paint I want in my office, and the perfect white kitchen to recreate.
Sadly, itâs a sellerâs market. By the time our broker submitted an offer, it was already pending. I was heartbroken. I still am. Hormones might be a factor in how hard Iâm taking it. Tyler was disappointed, but not nearly as sad as me. I have the emotional resiliency of a toddler these days. I need naps and frequent snacks like one, too.
He squeezes my hand. âWeâll find something soon, Tink. I promise.â
I guess it wasnât perfect. The interior was dated. It needed some paint and renovations. Still, that knowledge is little consolation when the things that canât be fixedâlike the location and the bones of the placeâwere solid.
Panic looms in the back of my mind. âWhat are we going to do with the baby?â My nesting instincts have kicked into overdrive. We picked a small apartment knowing it would be temporary, and without a permanent place, I feel unsettled.
âWe still have time. Heâs not going to be here for a few more months.â
When we come to a halt at the corner, I turn away from the street in question, tugging Tyler with me.
âCome on,â he says softly. âLetâs grab something from Lilyâs.â
Tempting, but making it there requires passing by the brownstone.
âMaybe another time.â
âIâll get triple chocolate and share with you,â he offers.
Itâs a dirty trick. Triple chocolate is my second favorite, which means I can get strawberry cheesecake for myself and then eat half of his. The temptation is almost too much to refuse.
âFine.â I canât avoid this street forever. Much as I like to contribute to the local economy, itâs hard to justify ordering dessert delivery several times a week and guilt-tipping the courier $20 because itâs only two blocks away.
As we pass the row of brownstones that house the unit we lost, I make a point to look the other way. Tyler slows to a stop and steers me directly toward it.
âLetâs go look for a sec.â
âWhat?â I protest. âItâs notâwe canât. The other buyers got it. Thereâs been a sold sign out here for two weeks.â Itâs gone now, so the new owners must be moving in soon.
He ignores my objection, gently steering me up the steps. Once weâre standing at the front door, he pulls a key from his pocket.
âWhat are you doing?â I ask.
Instead of replying, he unlocks the door and motions for me to go first. I step inside, and all the air leaves my lungs. Itâs even more beautiful than before. The walls have been freshly painted a creamy white and the hardwood floors gleam, newly refinished.
I look back and forth between the house and Tyler. âIâm confused.â
âThe other sale fell through,â he tells me. âItâs ours.â
âOurs?â My throat tightens, and hot tears fill my eyes.
âThe sale closed two weeks ago. Then I called in some favors and got a couple of trades in here to do the work so you wouldnât have to worry about it. All we need to do is hire movers and weâll be good to go. Your mom said sheâd come help us get settled before the baby comes.â
âYouâre kidding.â I blink back the moisture blurring my vision, threatening to overflow.
âDead serious.â
âI canât believe you didnât tell me.â I sob a laugh and throw my arms around him.
He squeezes me, being mindful of the belly. âYou were so crushed the first time. I didnât want to get your hopes up until I knew weâd get it for sure. There was a bit of a bidding war.â
âBidding war?â Iâm not sure I want to know the details. We can afford it, but the initial asking price involved a lot of zeroes.
Iâm a sniffling mess as he leads me through the rooms one by one. All of the details are perfect, down to the hardware on the doors.
We step into the kitchen, which looks like a completely different house than before. Last time I was here, it was full of dark wood and even darker green tile. Now itâs bright and airy, filled with white cabinets, trimmed marble countertops, and accented by glossy tile backsplash. Itâs so beautiful Iâd live in the kitchen itself if given the change.
âYou stalked my Pinterest, huh?â I ask Tyler.
He grins. âEvery board. Come on, letâs go look at your office.â
Fingers intertwined with mine, he leads me upstairs, and we take the first bedroom on the left. Itâs the smallest one, which frees up the remaining bedrooms for the rest of our eventual childrenâshould we even stay in New York City that long. With his career, thereâs no way to predict.
The office is equally amazing. A new coat of soft, warm pink adorns the walls, and a row of newly installed white built-in bookcases sits along one side. Once I throw in a desk, itâll be exactly what I always wanted.
âThank you.â I turn to Tyler and stand on my tiptoes to reach him, brushing my lips to his. âThis is amazing. I love it. I love you.â
He hugs me and releases me, kneeling down as he does. At first I think heâs tying his shoe, but then I see him pull something out of his pocket.
Pregnancy brain has me a little slow to catch up, and it takes until I lay eyes on what heâs holding for me to put everything together. Between his thumb and finger is a massive cushion-cut pink diamond set on a thin rose-gold band. Itâs stunning, and exactly what I would have picked.
âQuestion 1162,â he says. âWill you marry me?â
âHades,â I whisper, choking back a sob. âOf course I will.â
I give him my left hand and he slips on the ring easily, evidently having sized it for my pregnant sausage fingers. Holding it out, I admire the way it sparkles in the light. Did I mention itâs massive?
Tyler stands and draws me to him, kissing me softly. âI love you.â
âI love you.â My tears start to overflow again. Iâm overwhelmed in the best possible way. âThank you. You didnât have to do all of this for me.â
âI would do anything for you, Tink.â
The Novel will be updated first on this website. Come back and continue reading tomorrow, everyone!