Chapter 105 CHAPTER 105:SMALL THINGS THAT MEANS FOREVER
~ Calvin & Elara ~
The first thing Calvin notices is how carefully Elara walks.
Not slow she’s never been fragile but deliberate, like every step matters now in a way it didn’t before. Her hand rests on the gentle curve of her stomach, almost absentmindedly, as if she’s reminding herself that what’s growing there is real. That this isn’t just a dream she might wake up from.
He keeps half a step behind her as they enter the baby store, instinctively positioned like a shield even though there’s nothing here that could hurt her.
Or maybe there is.
Because the moment they step inside, everything changes.
Elara stops dead in her tracks.
Calvin almost walks into her.
The store is warm and bright, washed in soft colors—creams, pastels, muted blues and greens. Tiny clothes line the walls. Rows of impossibly small socks. Cribs arranged like perfect promises. Stuffed animals perched neatly on shelves, their stitched smiles too gentle to be accidental.
For a moment, Elara doesn’t breathe.
Calvin watches her chest rise and fall once, twice and then her eyes shine, glassy and overwhelmed.
“Oh,” she whispers.
That’s all.
Just oh.
And Calvin feels it too.
He didn’t think baby shopping would hit him like this.
He thought it would be practical. Lists. Decisions. Measurements. Things he could control.
Instead, it feels like stepping into a future that suddenly has weight and texture. Like seeing tomorrow laid out in cotton and wood and hope.
He reaches for Elara’s hand.
She laces her fingers through his instantly, gripping tight.
“I knew it would be a lot,” she murmurs, not looking at him. “I just didn’t realize how much.”
Calvin squeezes her hand back. “We can leave anytime.”
She shakes her head quickly. “No. I want to be here. I just ” She exhales slowly. “I didn’t know it would feel this real.”
He leans in, presses a kiss to her temple. “It is real.”
And suddenly, he’s not just saying it to reassure her.
He’s saying it to himself.
They start small.
Not with cribs or strollers or anything that feels too permanent.
They drift toward the clothing section, where rows of baby onesies hang like miniature versions of the world. Calvin lifts one off the rack without thinking.
It’s white. Simple. Barely bigger than his hand.
He turns it over, then back again.
“This fits… a person,” he says quietly.
Elara laughs softly, the sound breaking through the tension like sunlight. “A very small person.”
He swallows.
A person.
Someone who will have a voice. A laugh. A favorite song. Someone who will call them Mom and Dad without realizing the power of those words.
Calvin has faced fear before. Big fear. Loud fear.
This feels different.
This feels like standing on the edge of something sacred.
Elara moves through the aisles slowly, touching fabrics, reading tags, smiling to herself. Sometimes she stops and presses her lips together, blinking fast, like she’s holding something back.
Calvin notices everything.
The way she lingers over neutral colors, thoughtful. The way she avoids anything with words printed too boldly on the front. The way she instinctively gravitates toward softness.
“This one,” she says, holding up a pale green sleeper. “Feel it.”
He does.
It’s impossibly soft.
“Yeah,” he says. “Okay. Yeah.”
She smiles at him, and something in her expression makes his chest ache.
“You’re really here,” she says quietly. “You’re not scared.”
He answers honestly. “I am. Just… not in a way that makes me want to run.”
She nods like that means everything.
Because it does.
They end up in the stroller section next, and Calvin immediately goes into analysis mode. He checks wheels. Weight limits. Safety locks. He reads every placard like it’s a contract he can’t afford to misunderstand.
Elara watches him, amused.
“You’re taking this very seriously,” she teases.
He looks at her. “This thing will carry our child.”
She laughs softly. “Okay, fair.”
Still, she reaches for his arm, grounding him.
“Calvin,” she says gently. “We don’t have to decide everything today.”
He exhales, some of the tension leaving his shoulders. “Right. Sorry.”
She shakes her head. “Don’t apologize. I kind of love it.”
That does something to him.
The idea that she doesn’t see his intensity as a flaw but as devotion.
They sit on a small display couch meant for testing gliders. Elara lowers herself carefully, and Calvin immediately crouches in front of her without thinking.
“You okay?”
She nods. “Just tired.”
He places a hand on her knee, steady and warm.
For a moment, neither of them speaks.
Around them, other couples move through the store some laughing, some arguing gently, some quiet like them.
Calvin realizes something then.
They’re not pretending.
They belong here.
“I keep thinking about who they’ll be,” Elara says softly, staring at a row of cribs. “Not what they’ll look like but who they’ll become.”
Calvin leans back against the couch, looking where she’s looking. “Yeah?”
“I wonder if they’ll be gentle. Or stubborn. Or loud.” She smiles faintly. “I wonder what they’ll inherit from us.”
He thinks about that.
About the parts of himself he hopes their child will never carry. About the parts of Elara he hopes the world will protect.
“They’ll have you,” he says. “That already tilts the odds.”
She looks at him then. Really looks.
“You don’t think I’m going to mess this up?”
He doesn’t hesitate. “No.”
“But what if”
“Elara,” he says softly, interrupting her spiral before it can take hold. “We’re not perfect. But we’re present. And that counts for more than anything.”
Her eyes glisten.
She nods, trusting him with that fear.
They pick out a small stuffed elephant together.
It’s grey, with floppy ears and a stitched smile.
Elara hugs it to her chest, laughing through tears. “This is ridiculous.”
Calvin smiles. “You love it.”
“I do.”
“So does our kid,” he says simply.
She freezes.
Then she presses the elephant to her stomach.
“Hi,” she whispers, barely audible.
Calvin looks away, overwhelmed.
At checkout, their basket is far from full.
A few outfits. The elephant. Tiny socks. A baby blanket Elara couldn’t stop touching.
But it feels like more than enough.
As they walk back to the car, the sun warm on their skin, Calvin carries the bag like it’s fragile glass.
Elara slips her hand into his.
“I’m glad we did this,” she says.
“Me too.”
She hesitates. “I’m scared… but I’m happy.”
He nods. “Same.”
They stop beside the car.
Calvin turns to her, resting his forehead against hers.
“We’ll figure it out,” he says quietly. “Every step. Together.”
She smiles, soft and sure.
“I know.”
And for the first time, Calvin understands that courage doesn’t always roar.
Sometimes, it looks like a small bag of baby clothes and the decision to walk forward anyway.