There were a little over two weeks left until the wedding.
The number felt both close and strangely distant, hovering sowhere between anticipation and disbelief. Willow noticed it most in the way people spoke to her now. Everything was counted backward. Days. Fittings. Final confirmations. Gentle reminders that the quiet stretch she was in would not last forever.
That morning, she packed Zana’s diaper bag with careful familiarity and loaded the car without rushing. Lorrynne had invited her over for the day, insisting it would be easier with the nanny already there, space enough for adults to talk and babies to hold court uninterrupted.
Zana babbled the entire drive, hands waving, voice full of opinion. Willow responded out of habit, nodding as if the comntary mattered, because sohow it did. "I hear you," she said softly. "Strong feelings this morning." Zana answered with a triumphant sound that could have ant anything.
Lorrylne’s house was already alive when they arrived. Sunlight poured through wide windows. The sll of coffee and sothing baked lingered in the air. The nanny greeted Zana imdiately, scooping her up with practiced ease, already mid conversation as if the two of them had unfinished business from the last visit.
"Well," Lorrynne said, pulling Willow into a warm embrace, "you look like soone who slept."
"That’s the highest complint I’ve received all week," Willow replied.
They settled into the kitchen first. Coffee was poured. Zana was installed on a mat nearby, surrounded by toys that she imdiately rejected in favor of vocal comntary. The nanny sat close, smiling, nodding, responding seriously to each sound as if it were a policy debate.
"She’s very invested today," Lorrynne observed.
"She has opinions about everything lately," Willow said. "We are entering the era of baby politics."
Zana punctuated the statent with a sharp babble that sounded suspiciously like agreent, and they laughed, the sound easy and unforced.
After a while, Lorrynne disappeared briefly and returned carrying a small box wrapped carefully in pale blue paper. She set it gently on the table between them without ceremony.
"I got you sothing," she said. "For the wedding."
Willow blinked. "You didn’t have to."
"I know," Lorrynne said. "That’s why I did." She nudged the box forward.
Willow opened it slowly. Inside, nestled in soft fabric, was a delicate necklace. Silver, simple, elegant, with a faint blue stone set into the clasp. Not flashy. Not fragile. Sothing ant to be worn rather than displayed.
"For sothing borrowed," Lorrynne said. "And sothing blue, and sothing old. I want you to keep it. But technically it’s mine until you walk down the aisle."
Willow’s throat tightened unexpectedly. "It’s perfect," she said quietly. "Thank you."
Lorrynne smiled, watching her carefully. "It felt like you."
Willow closed the box gently. "I actually already have sothing old," she said after a mont.
Lorrynne looked up, curious. "You do?"
Willow nodded. "From my grandmother. A bracelet. Gold. Simple. She wore it every day. My mother gave it to years ago." She paused, fingers resting lightly on the edge of the table. "The last thing she gave ," Willow continued. "Before she decided her life should not include a daughter."
The words landed softly, without drama. Just truth. Lorrynne did not interrupt.
"The clasp is broken," Willow added. "It’s been sitting in a drawer for years. I think I want to fix it. Wear it."
"That matters," Lorrynne said.
"It does," Willow agreed. "I was thinking of taking it to that jewelry shop at the mall. The one that works with antique pieces. They know how to preserve things without changing them."
Lorrynne nodded. "The right hands."
Zana babbled loudly, as if insisting on inclusion. "Yes," Willow said, smiling down at her. "You too. You’re part of everything."
They spent the rest of the morning together without agenda. Lunch unfolded slowly. Zana migrated from mat to lap to floor, supervised constantly, offering her opinions on everything from fabric textures to spoon choices. The nanny handled it all with calm efficiency, translating baby sounds into mock serious conclusions.
"She’s saying she prefers the blue napkin," she announced at one point.
"That tracks," Lorrynne said. "She has refined taste."
Willow watched it all with quiet contentnt. This small circle. This ease. The way nothing needed to be explained.
Later, while Zana napped in a sunlit corner, Willow brought out the bracelet. It was exactly as she rembered. Worn smooth by years of use. Gold dulled just enough to prove it had lived a life before hers.
Lorrynne held it carefully. "This is beautiful," she said. "It’s honest."
"That’s why I want it," Willow replied. "Not because it’s perfect. Because it endured."
They sat for a mont in comfortable silence.
"I’ll take it tomorrow," Willow said. "Just a quick trip. Get the clasp fixed. Then it’s ready."
Lorrynne smiled. "Two weeks," she said softly.
Willow nodded. "Two weeks."
Zana stirred, waking with imdiate interest in the world. The day resud its gentle pace. More babbling, more warmth, and preparation. Love moving quietly through rooms filled with light, and a small gold bracelet waiting to be made whole again.
The nanny lifted Zana and settled her against her shoulder, murmuring sothing soothing as Zana blinked and then resud her comntary, apparently dissatisfied with sleep having interrupted her thoughts.
"She wakes up like she has unfinished business," Lorrynne said, smiling.
"She always does," Willow replied. "As if the world owes her an explanation."
Zana responded with a pleased sound that suggested agreent.
They moved into the living room, sunlight stretching across the floor in long, lazy patterns. Lorrynne poured fresh coffee while Willow settled onto the couch, watching Zana be carried gently around the room. There was sothing deeply calming about the ordinariness of it. No schedule to keep. No role to perform. Just ti unfolding at its own pace.
Lorrynne joined her, sitting close enough that their shoulders brushed. She followed Willow’s gaze to Zana, who was now intensely focused on a patterned pillow.
"She’s happy," Lorrynne said quietly.
"She is," Willow agreed.
A pause followed, open and unforced.
"I used to imagine this part differently," Lorrynne said. "The lead up to a wedding. I thought it would be louder. More frantic."
"I think I would have run," Willow said with a small smile.
Lorrynne laughed softly. "You would have vanished."
"Without a trace."
They shared the smile easily.
Lorrynne turned more fully toward Willow. "Can I tell you sothing?"
"Of course."
"I have always dread of having a daughter like you," Lorrynne said. "Soone thoughtful. Soone observant. Soone strong without needing to announce it." She smiled, gentle and sincere. "It is your mother’s loss. And very much my gain."
The words settled slowly. Willow felt warmth spread through her chest, steady and real.
"That ans more than you know," she said quietly.
"I think you do know," Lorrynne replied. "You just do not always let yourself keep it."
Willow laughed softly. "Fair."
Zana chose that mont to lean decisively toward Willow, arms extended. Willow took her without hesitation, settling her against her chest. Zana imdiately reached for the pale blue box still resting nearby.
"No," Willow said gently, smiling. "That is not for chewing."
Zana considered this and tried again.
"She has an eye for heirlooms," Lorrynne said.
"Clearly."
Willow settled Zana into the car seat and took a mont before closing the door, watching her daughter blink against the brightness, already distracted by sothing unseen. She smiled to herself, then looked back at the house, still glowing quietly behind her.
As she pulled away, the day stayed with her in an easy way, warm and complete, needing nothing more than to be enjoyed.
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