Dice Roll results:
Leonie von der Marck Other None Luck Pregnancy Succeeded
The Lioness paced the floors of the cottage, arms crossed loosely over her chest as she awaited his arrival. He’d been working that day, she knew, and she hadn’t given him a hard time, even though it was a Sunday. It had given her time to plan, and time to fret over how he might take it. They had wanted this, she knew, but it was a lot earlier than planned and so, she had bided her time, doing her best to throw her man off the scent for the last two weeks or so. It hadn’t been easy, especially with the uncharacteristic declination of the occasional glass of wine with dinner, or a sudden need to sleep early and often, even to nap during the day that had never been a ‘thing’ before. Even the more regular appearance of pajama or yoga pants might have been telling, but Leonie just didn't have the energy required for putting effort into daily outfits at the moment and hinted at a supposedly intense workout routine that had her dressing for comfort rather than style. She’d explained she was detoxing for the upcoming wedding; even if no exact date had been set, he knew she’d chosen a gown and like almost every other bride, Leonie had played the dutifully worried-about-her-weight kind of girl, in supposed anticipation of the first fitting. It had worked, so far... or at least, as far as she could tell.
And now the day she had decided upon had come. Father’s Day. She didn’t care how trite it might seem to others; the Lioness had figured there was no better day to inform Lou of the secret she’d held since Alaric had told her, only a short couple of weeks before. It had been insane to think she could keep it from him for any amount of time, let alone the short time she had, but Leonie hoped the wait would be worth the reward. She hadn’t wasted any time on finding a midwife, either, and so far, all was well. It was okay to get her hopes up, cautiously, until a few more weeks were to go by.
The gift was all wrapped up and ready to go. She had debated adding one of the numerous pregnancy tests she’d taken in the prior weeks but decided against it at the last minute. The neutral onesie with the obvious “Hello Daddy” artfully embroidered upon the front was more than enough. And if it turned out it wasn’t, she had also located his baby blanket, where Mara had once showed her where she’d stored away some treasured memories. The once-white, so-soft knit had faded into a more off-white color, but it was clean and sweet and had been carefully preserved for what she hoped was just such a purpose and was now folded carefully beneath the onesie. There was no ultrasound picture, yet, but then that was an event she wanted to wait to share with him anyway.
She had to laugh at herself though; there was likely no better detector than a telepathic vampire but she had practically bought out the drugstore in her disbelief and taken every damned test they had, at first with much swearing and the same amount of shock as the night she’d found out, but eventually the constant positive result had become a source of relief. It was still real, still happening, and at nearly eight weeks, there was little left to worry about - the odds had already almost been beaten. The Lioness had never taken better care of herself or treated herself so kindly, and had taken full advantage of the newfound sense of wellbeing that came along with it. No matter it had been completely unplanned; Leonie was settling into the idea of being a mother more and more each day, able to wrap her head around such a thing happening before she’d been ready to plan, and this alone was what gave her the nerve required to hang onto the secret until she could surprise Lou with the same news.
She didn't really know what to expect; sure she'd had 'scares’ before, but those small few had always ended up being nothing, just fluke late months that she had navigated alone. This was altogether different and the Lioness had thought for quite awhile about how it would all turn out.
But no matter that the amount of fretting or thinking, or wondering, either, had panned out to a bunch more questions than answers. She drew in a slow, deep breath, and sat herself down in a cozy armchair, curling up with hands resting easily on knees. She'd know at least one answer soon enough, her pragmatic mind whispered comfortingly, and then they could go from there.