Leo was the one who woke up first.
Not from stress.
From excitement.
He reached for his phone on the nightstand, opened the recording from the appointment, and played it quietly.
That fast, steady rhythm filled the room again.
Aria stirred beside him.
"Again?" she mumbled, eyes still closed.
He didn't even pretend. "Yes."
She smiled without opening her eyes. "You're obsessed."
"It's my child."
"It's our child."
He leaned down and kissed her temple. "Exactly."
This time when she listened, she didn't brace herself.
She didn't analyze the responsibility.
She didn't think about identity or balance or disappearing into motherhood.
She just let herself feel it.
And what she felt was joy.
Not loud.
Not dramatic.
Just steady happiness.
Breakfast became a small celebration for no reason other than they felt like it.
Aria stood in the kitchen making pancakes - something she rarely had patience for.
Leo hovered nearby, pretending to help and mostly stealing pieces.
"You're in a suspiciously good mood," he observed.
"I slept well."
"Is that the only reason?"
She flipped a pancake. "Maybe I just like being pregnant."
He blinked.
She looked at him over her shoulder. "What?"
"You haven't complained once today."
She narrowed her eyes playfully. "I complain in moderation."
He stepped closer. "You're glowing."
"That's hormones."
"It's happiness."
She paused at that.
Maybe it was.
She felt lighter. Not physically - that would come later - but emotionally.
The uncertainty from the first weeks had settled into something tangible.
They'd seen the heartbeat.
They'd heard it.
Now it wasn't abstract anymore.
It was happening.
And she wanted it.
Mid-morning, Noah showed up unannounced.
He didn't knock properly - just walked in with the spare key he'd had since forever.
"I brought fruit," he announced, holding up a bag dramatically. "Pregnant people eat fruit."
Aria laughed from the couch. "I eat normal food too, you know."
"No, no. I Googled. This is serious."
Leo raised an eyebrow. "Should we be concerned about how much you Googled?"
Noah ignored him and dropped the bag on the table.
He walked over and looked at Aria like she was suddenly made of glass.
"Are you feeling okay?"
"I'm fine."
"Are you tired?"
"No."
"Are you sure?"
She grabbed a pillow and threw it at him.
"I am pregnant, not terminally ill."
He caught the pillow and grinned.
"Just checking. I have responsibilities now."
Leo smirked. "As what, exactly?"
Noah straightened. "Fun uncle. Obviously."
Aria shook her head, smiling.
Noah had already known about the pregnancy. He had been emotional the night they told him. Overprotective for approximately three days.
Now he was settling into excitement.
"What are we thinking?" he asked, sitting down. "Boy? Girl?"
"We don't know," Aria said.
"I think boy," Leo added.
Noah pointed at him. "You're biased."
"Maybe."
Aria rolled her eyes. "You're both impossible."
But she liked this.
The energy.
The anticipation.
It didn't feel heavy.
It felt alive.
Later that afternoon, Aria had a virtual meeting with the wedding planner.
Actual planning now.
No vague inspiration boards.
Real logistics.
Guest confirmations.
Menu tastings.
Timeline.
"We'll need to finalize dress fittings soon," the planner said.
Aria nodded. "I'll schedule them this week."
Leo, sitting beside her, raised an eyebrow but said nothing.
After the call ended, he looked at her.
"You're sure about that?"
"Yes."
"With the pregnancy?"
"I'm pregnant, Leo. Not incapacitated."
He held up his hands. "I didn't say that."
She softened. "I know."
He leaned back. "I just don't want you overwhelmed."
"I'm not."
And she wasn't.
If anything, planning the wedding while pregnant made it feel more layered.
More meaningful.
This wasn't just about two people committing to each other anymore.
It was about building something larger.
That realization didn't scare her.
It excited her.
That evening, they went for a walk.
Nothing dramatic.
Just around the neighborhood.
The air was cool.
Leo kept a relaxed pace beside her.
Not hovering.
Not monitoring.
Just there.
"You're quiet," he said gently.
"I'm thinking."
"Dangerous."
She nudged him lightly. "Stop saying that."
He smiled.
She looked ahead at a family walking across the street - a couple with a stroller, arguing mildly about something mundane.
Not glamorous.
Not cinematic.
Real.
She found herself smiling at the sight.
"What?" Leo asked.
"I used to look at that and think it looked exhausting."
"And now?"
"It looks... normal."
He nodded slowly.
"You want normal?"
"I want ours."
That made him stop walking for a second.
She turned to him.
He studied her carefully.
"No fear?" he asked.
She shook her head.
"No fear."
He exhaled like he'd been waiting to hear that.
"Good."
They resumed walking.
Their hands brushed naturally.
No dramatic declarations.
Just quiet certainty.
Back home, they sat at the dining table reviewing guest confirmations.
Leo's phone buzzed.
Hale.
He answered casually.
"Yes?"
Pause.
Aria watched his expression.
It didn't harden.
Didn't tense.
It softened.
"Of course," he said. "We'll come Sunday."
He hung up.
"What did she want?" Aria asked.
"Lunch. She wants to host. Celebrate properly."
Aria smiled.
"That's sweet."
"It is."
He looked at her carefully.
"You okay with that?"
"Yes."
No hesitation.
No defensiveness.
Just yes.
That night, as they got ready for bed, Aria caught her reflection in the mirror.
Nothing obvious had changed yet.
But she felt different.
She placed a hand lightly over her stomach.
Not protective.
Not anxious.
Just connected.
Leo walked up behind her and wrapped his arms around her waist.
"You look proud," he said softly.
She met his eyes in the mirror.
"I am."
"For what?"
"For us."
He rested his chin on her shoulder.
"We're doing this well."
"We are."
Not perfectly.
Not dramatically.
Just well.
He kissed her cheek.
"I like you like this."
She smiled. "Happy?"
"Yes."
She turned in his arms.
"I've always been capable of happy, Leo."
"I know."
"And I'm choosing it."
He nodded.
"That's my girl."
She rolled her eyes lightly. "Don't get possessive."
"Too late."
She laughed.
And when they lay down that night, there was no tension humming in the background.
No suspense.
No shadow creeping at the edge of the story.
Just two people excited about the life they were building.
The wedding.
The baby.
The future.
And for once, nothing felt like it was about to interrupt that.





