We’re curled up on the couch, my four-year-old Haley and me, and this has got to be our five-hundredth time through Corduroy. She’s got hundreds of books in her room—she’s a very spoiled little bookworm—and yet this beat up old classic is one of her favorites.
Mine too—it’s actually my book from when I was her age, one of the few things I’ve managed to hold onto over the years and pass down to her, making it that much more special.
Haley was a honeymoon baby—our little sequel—and she definitely inherited her mom and dad’s love of books. She’s also got Prescott’s thick hair, his enormous heart, my blue eyes, my laugh. In short, she’s freaking adorable.
And she’s just as excited as Prescott and I about the baby brother who’s due to join our little family in about a month.
I’m on leave from the library right now, resting and getting the baby’s room ready while we wait, but I’m also cherishing every moment I’ve got with Haley while she’s still an only child, and before she starts kindergarten in the fall.
We’ve got our big, cozy farmhouse, and plenty of bedrooms to fill up with kids and love and laughter. The past five years have been the best of my life—I only wish time moved a little slower.
“What’s the next line?” I prompt Haley as we turn the page.
“‘Then one morning a little girl stopped and looked straight into Corduroy’s bright eyes,’” she says. She’s not actually reading the words yet, but I’m still continually amazed at how smart our little girl is. She’s got the whole book memorized, and a few others besides.
“‘Oh, Mommy, look!’” I read, tickling her until she’s a squirming, giggling ball on the couch. “‘There’s the very bear I’ve always wanted!’”
Before we get any further, I hear a door opening in the hallway and Haley vaults off the couch, yelling, “Daddy’s home!”
“Daddy’s home!” I repeat, just as excited although at eight months pregnant, it’s a bit more of an ordeal for me to get off the couch than it is for Haley.
Prescott appears in the living room doorway a moment later, our daughter in one arm and a shopping bag looped over the other. “I come bearing gifts.”
“For me?” Haley asks, trying to reach the bag.
“For both of my girls,” he answers, coming over and giving me a kiss, then setting Haley down so he can kneel and kiss my belly too.
By then, Haley has turned into a jumping bean, trying to peek inside the shopping bag and asking, “What is it? What is it?”
Prescott chuckles and puts a hand on top of her head, trying to settle her down. “Here, why don’t you find out?”
He pulls a tissue-wrapped item out of the bag and gives it to her. I can tell by the shape that it’s another picture book to add to her collection, and she’s got the tissue paper ripped off in about half a second.
“A book!” She’s overjoyed before she’s even really looked at it, and I can’t help laughing. It could be a book about the joys of watching paint dry and she’d be ecstatic.
“What’s it say?” I ask. “Can you read the title?”
Haley plops down on the couch, up for the challenge. She traces her fingers over the words. “Lllloooo…”
She makes a pretty darn good effort for a four-year-old, and after sounding it out for about a minute, Prescott crouches beside her and reads along, “Lola Reads to Leo. It’s about a girl just like you who likes to read to her baby brother.”
“Thank you, Daddy,” she says, throwing her arms around his neck.
I tear up. Maybe it’s the pregnancy hormones, or maybe I’m just a big sap, but I happen to think my family is perfect.
Haley hops off the couch, taking the book into her playroom to flip through it, and Prescott draws me into a hug.
“I got you something too,” he says, reaching into the shopping bag again and producing a second tissue-wrapped book.
“What’s the occasion?” I ask.
He shrugs. “I missed you. I love you. You’re carrying our child. Do I really need a reason to give my wife a present?”
I laugh and give him a wry smile. “So, you’re trying to seduce me.”
“Bingo,” he says. “Is it working?”
I should probably play a little harder to get, but I have to confess that even after five years, all it takes is a look from those dark, smoldering eyes. I play coy and ignore his question, unwrapping the book instead.
“Oh my God, Prescott,” I say, running my hand over the smooth leather binding. “This is a first edition of Pride and Prejudice.”
“‘You must allow me to tell you how ardently I admire and love you,’” he quotes, pulling me back into his arms, my big belly between us, his hands on my hips. “Remember our first night together?”