Page 157 of Ruined By My Ex's Dad


Font Size:

She silenced me with a finger to my lips, her eyes suspiciously bright. "It's beautiful. Perfect because it's imperfect. Because you created it with your own hands instead of delegating it like everything else in your life."

The approval in her voice, the understanding of what this gesture truly represented—these were gifts I was still learning to accept. Once, I would have seen her tears as a sign of weakness.

Now I recognized them as honest emotion, as the response this imperfect offering deserved.

"Our child deserves personal touches more than hired expertise," I said, voicing the realization that had driven me to begin this project in quiet pre-dawn hours. "Deserves pieces of us, not just what we can purchase or commission."

"Yes," she agreed, moving closer to study the details. Her finger traced the outline of the Maine coastline, the small star marking her hometown. "This is what family means, Lucas. Not perfection, not achievement, not controlled excellence. But personal contribution. Genuine effort. The willingness to create something imperfect but meaningful."

She turned to me then, those green eyes filled with an emotion I was still learning to name. Not possession, not desire, though those elements existed. But something deeper, more essential. Connection. Recognition. The profound understanding that we saw each other entirely and chose each other anyway.

"I love you," she said. "Not the CEO, not the empire builder, not the man who can buy anything. But this man—the one who paints a mural at four in the morning because commissioned artwork isn't personal enough for his child."

I pulled her against me, arms encircling her with protective gentleness, feeling her heart beat against mine, our child nestledsafely between us. Not possession but partnership. Not control but connection.

"I love you, too," I murmured against her hair. "Enough to try being less than perfect. To create rather than command. To offer what I can make instead of what I can buy."

We stood there in the half-finished nursery, surrounded by color swatches, fabric samples, and paint supplies, the morning light filtering through windows that would soon frame our child's first view of the world.

Imperfect, unfinished, beautifully human in its incompleteness.

Like me. Like us.

Like the family we were creating together.

For the first time in my carefully ordered existence, incompleteness felt like possibility rather than failure.

Uncertainty felt like an opportunity rather than a threat. The future—unplanned, uncontrolled, gloriously unpredictable—felt like the greatest adventure I'd ever embarked upon.

And the woman in my arms, carrying our child beneath her heart, was the only companion I wanted for the journey.

Chapter 26

Savannah

As we walked toward the elevator, toward our separate professional worlds that would converge again at day's end, I felt the certainty settle into my bones.

Not the provisional confidence of strategic independence.

Not the careful calculation of acceptable vulnerability.

But the bone-deep knowledge that I had found my place.

My person.

My home.

Finally safe. Finally claimed.

Finally, irrevocably, myself.

"Do you ever wonder what we'll be like a year from now?" I asked as the elevator doors closed, sealing us in our private bubble for a few more precious moments.

"When she's here. When everything changes again."

Lucas's hand found the small of my back, the touch both possessive and supportive.

"I don't wonder," he said, that familiar certainty warming his tone. "I know."