Phillip kisses me as heâs leaving for work.
âHappy anniversary to my sexy husband,â I say.
âHappy anniversary, Princess. Can you believe weâve been married for three whole months?â
âI have to be honest, when we were going through marriage counseling, I thought marriage was going to be hard. Everyone says the first year is so hard.â
Phillip laughs. âParts of our first three months been hard.â
âWhich parts?â
Phillip grins.
I roll my eyes at him. âAlways thinking about sex.â
âI told you, weâve got a lot of catching up to do.â
âPhillip, I donât want to fight with you.â
âDid I do something wrong?â
âNo, I mean, in general, I donât want to fight with you. And I would never make a scene and stomp out like Lori did. I respect you too much to do that in front of our friends. She really was bitchy to him. I didnât like it.â
âIâm glad he didnât go chasing after her this time. Lately, she seems to think that she can say anything and get away with it. It pissed me off how she acted like your morning sickness wasnât real because hers was worse.â
âDo you think sheâs mad at me because my pregnancy has been pretty easy?â
âIt hasnât been easy for you. Youâve been tired. Youâve felt sick. And you work all day and never complain. She doesnât have a job. What the heck does she do all day?â
âSometimes, I complain.â
âYouâve yet to be a bitch.â
âThatâs because you bring me cupcakes.â
He kisses my nose. âIâm taking you out tonight.â
âWhat are we going to do?â
âDinner and a movie?â he suggests.
âOh, popcorn sounds so good.â
âActually, scratch that. Movie first. If youâre still hungry after youâve eaten the theater out of buttered popcorn and Milk Duds, then weâll get dinner.â
âSounds like the perfect night,â I tease.
He lays his hand across my stomach. âI want to start taking pictures of this.â
âOf me waking up?â
âNo, of your stomach. So, we can see how youâre growing.â
âI saw a super-cute thing online where you write how many weeks along you are on a chalkboard and take a picture with it.â
âWe should do that. You have the cutest little bump.â He gives me another kiss. âI love you.â
After Phillip leaves for work, I grab my phone off my nightstand and text his mom.
Me: Would it be okay if Lori and I spent the night on Saturday? Weâre coming up for the shower and then going out after. We probably wonât get there until later.
Mrs. Mac: Of course! Iâll give you an extra key at the shower. What are your plans for Sunday?
Me: Going wedding dress shopping with Chelsea, and then Iâm supposed to stop at the Diamondsâ before we leave town.
Mrs. Mac: Iâll make lunch for when you get back from shopping. And, yes, I heard about the surprise.
Me: Got any hints for me?
Mrs. Mac: My lips are sealed.
I throw my robe on, grab a breakfast bar, go into my home office, and check my emails. Nothing too pressing, which is good because I have to finish getting everything ready for the shower. I rented a great event space, one I found when we were looking for our wedding reception. I loved the historic location, the brick-floored courtyard, and the palladium windows overlooking a small garden.
And the staff has been great to work with on the catering. Weâre having a popcorn bar, fruit kabobs, tea sandwiches, pastel macarons, and a stacked lemon cake. There will be a bar set up with decanters full of juices that you can mix with fresh berries or champagne. The table centerpieces are baby bottles filled with yellow flowers.
I decided against your typical sit-down-in-a-circle-and-play-games baby shower. Weâve done that enough lately. I want this shower to be more about mingling and fun. So, instead of games, Iâm having activity stations.
I asked all the shower guests to bring a baby photo of themselves. When they arrive, they will hang it, clothesline-style, on a piece of twine from mini clothespins. Behind each photo will be a piece of pastel paper in different colors, so the game of guessing which shower guest is which baby will become part of the decor.
The second station is the advice area. I covered a paint can with fabric to match Loriâs nursery and then hand-drew a giraffe design, which I then printed on plain notecards. Everyone will write their best piece of baby or parenting advice on a card and put it in the can.
The third station is for decorating a baby onesie. I bought a whole bunch of snap-bottom T-shirts in different colors. Each guest can use paint, fabric markers, or iron-on decals to decorate one, and Lori will get to take them all home.
All the shower gifts are going on one table in the center of the room. This becomes the present station. Lori will be opening presents throughout the party and displaying them on another table for all the guests to see. Guests can sit in a small circle of chairs to watch her open gifts when they want, but they wonât be forced to sit the entire time.
Can I just take a brief moment to say thank God for Pinterest? Itâs made doing things like this so much easier. Sometimes, when I canât sleep, I pull up the app on my phone and pin stuff, like amazing food I hope to make someday, decor for our house, holiday decorating, cool architecture, DIY, crafts, travel spots, clothing boards, gardening, bucket lists, and party ideas. Considering my mom used to do this by cutting stuff out of magazines and gluing them into a notebook, this is pretty incredible.
Iâve been working on all the details since I got back from our honeymoon, and even though Iâm irritated with the way Lori acted last night, I hope she loves it.
Iâm also looking forward to having three hours alone in the car with her. Maybe sheâll tell me whatâs going on.
I decide to text her.
Me: Are you excited for the shower?
Lori: Yeah.
One-worded text = not good.
Lori: I forgot your birthday. Luckily, my husband didnât. Thatâs quite the present.
Me: It is. Thanks to you both.
Lori: Obviously, I had nothing to do with it.
Me: Lori, whatâs going on? Why are you not excited about this? Think ahead. You donât love football that much. This is a way for you to go to the games, take the baby, socialize, and not have to sit out in the weather. Itâs the best of both worlds. Like having your friends over for a party at your house, yet you get the excitement of the crowd.
Lori: Do you know how much it cost?
Me: Actually, I do. Dannyâs dad is very conservative. He helped Danny with the decision.
Lori: He just wants the box, too.
Me: You just donât get it, Lori. Doing this for his family and friends is like a dream come true for Danny. I really wish you were more supportive of him.
Lori: Of course you would take his side on this. You want the box, too. I donât want people using him. I have his best interests at heart. Thatâs what pisses me off.
Me: How could I be using him when I didnât know about it until heâd done it? Youâre being ridiculous. And Iâm saying that as your best friend.
Danny texts me.
Danny: Want to go get lunch in a little bit?
Me: Are you at home? Iâm texting Lori. I thought she would apologize. For forgetting my birthday. For her outburst last night. Instead, sheâs trying to defend herself.
Danny: Thatâs why I want to go to lunch. I need to get away from her before I say something Iâm going to regret.
Me: What happened when you went home last night?
Danny: Are you at work?
Me: No, Iâm working from home today. Although, technically, Iâm not doing much work. Iâm finishing up getting everything ready for the shower tomorrow.
Danny: Iâm coming over.
Me: Iâm in my office. Front door is unlocked.
A few minutes later, he strolls in my office. He looks like he didnât sleep last night.
âAre you okay?â
He plops down on the floor and runs his hands through his hair. âIâm not sure I can live like this.â
My eyes get big. âWhat are you saying?â
âIâm saying, right now, I want a divorce. And, if it wasnât for her being pregnant and due soon, Iâd be getting one.â His voice is angry, but I can see the hurt in his eyes. Danny never quits or gives up at anything he does, so this is serious.
I stop what Iâm doing and go sit on the floor next to him.
âWhy are you still in your robe? Itâs almost noon.â
âIâd wear my robe all day if I could.â
âAre you naked under there?â
âWeâre all naked under our clothes, Danny,â I say with a laugh.
He laughs, leans his head on my shoulder, and smiles. âYou always know how to make me laugh.â
âThatâs because my answer has been the same ever since you started asking me that question ten years ago. Or whenever it was that you went through puberty. Danny, you and Lori have only been together for a couple of years. Sheâs not going to know all the stuff I know about. She has been acting differently lately though. Her not remembering my birthday just glares at me. Itâs not that big of a deal. We forget sometimes, no biggie. But sheâs the girl in our sorority who never forgot a birthday and gave everyone an adorable hand-made birthday card. Itâs not like her.â
âItâs the preterm labor. Sheâs been pissed at me since then. Although itâs weird; she didnât seem pissed when I got to the hospital. She was happy and relieved. It wasnât until a few days after that she started acting crazy.â
âDanny, they put her on medicine to stop the contractions.â
âYeah.â
âDoes the medicine have side effects?â
âI donât know. Jesus, I hope thatâs all it is.â
I grab my computer and set it on my lap. âI know they gave her a shot of something that started with a T at the hospital. Is that what sheâs taking now?â
âNo, sheâs on progest-something.â
âProgesterone?â
âYeah, I think so.â
âBut thatâs a hormone.â
âYeah, thatâs it. Itâs a hormone.â
âWell, no wonder. Hang on; let me look this up to be sure.â I do a quick search and then turn the computer toward him.
He reads. â
. Oh my God. Why didnât the doctor tell me this? Thatâs what itâs like. Sheâs in constant PMS bitch-mode.â
He puts his hands on his face and rubs it.
âAt least you know itâs temporary. Danny, you love her.â
âI do. Now, I feel bad.â
âWhy?â
âBecause sheâs pregnant with my baby, and Iâm telling you I want a divorce because sheâs being either an irrational bitch or sobbing lunatic, and it turns out itâs probably not her fault. Sheâs taking the medicine to keep our baby inside her longer, so it can grow and be healthy. Iâm an asshole.â
âDanny, you arenât an asshole. You just didnât understand. The doctor should have told you to expect this. Why donât you go see if she wants to go out for lunch?â
âYeah,â he says, getting up. âThanks, Jay, for just listening.â
âYou know Phillip and I are always here for you.â
âI tried talking to Phillip about it this morning. He said I should suck it up, be a man, and take care of my pregnant wife.â
I melt. âAhh, heâs so sweet.â
âI told him weâd revisit that conversation when youâre a few weeks away from giving birth.â Danny laughs. âSee ya.â