“Ray?” I started.
“Please,” he said softly. “Just wait. Two more minutes.”
We pulled into our driveway.
He parked, got out, and came around to help me with the baby.
“I know it made no sense,” he said as we walked to the front door. “I couldn’t explain it over the phone. Just… look.”
He unlocked the door and pushed it open.
I stepped inside and stopped breathing.
We pulled into our driveway.
Everything smelled of fresh paint and something floral… lavender, maybe.
The entryway had soft new lighting.
A plush rug I didn’t recognize stretched across the floor. The walls (once a dingy beige) were now painted a warm cream and white.
“Ray, what’s going on here?”
“Keep going,” he said softly.
I walked down the hallway. Past the bathroom, which now had a handrail by the tub and a cushioned bath mat. Past our bedroom, where I glimpsed blackout curtains and a small bassinet set up beside the bed.
“Ray, what’s going on here?”
Then I reached the nursery.
And I started crying.
The room was perfect.
Not magazine-perfect. Not staged-perfect.
Perfect for us.
Soft gray and pink walls. White furniture. A rocking chair in the corner with a little side table and a reading lamp. Shelves with books and stuffed animals arranged carefully.
Above the crib, in careful hand-painted letters, it said: “Welcome, Little One.”
I started crying.
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