Page 44 of It Was Always You

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Luca stayed by her side for the night, going out the next morning to run some errands and collect the car so he could bring her home that afternoon. The hospital released her at around six p.m. and Luca was there to make sure she got home safely. He was suddenly reluctant to let her out of his sight, holding her hand as she walked along as though she might slip and hurt herself at any moment.

‘I’m fine Luca, honestly,’ she assured him.

‘I know you are Libby, but still… I’m not going to let you lift a finger around here. You need to rest, rest, rest when you are not at work… and even when you are there I want you to try your best to take it easy. Stress is not good for you or the baby, and we need to make you and it our priority right now.’

Libby wasn’t complaining about the special treatment. When they got home he ran her a bath and cooked her dinner. He had bought her a massive bunch of flowers, which were letting off their wonderful fresh fragrance into the flat. After her bath she put on her favourite baggy maternity dress and came in to find the table laid. A candle was flickering in the middle of the table and there was a little jewellery box in the centre of her place mat.

‘Luca! Have you bought me a present?’ she smiled.

‘Maybe,’ he responded. He was grinning from ear to ear, looking remarkably sheepish as he came over to the table to stand by her side. He took the little box and knelt down in front of her on one knee.

‘Oh my god,’ she said, as it dawned on her what he was doing.

‘My darling Libby. In the last twenty-four hours I have realised just how much you and our baby mean to me. I know that I cannot live without you. I love you so very much. I wonder: will you do me the honour of becoming my wife?’ He opened the box to reveal a single, solitaire diamond sparkling with all its might against the blue velvet lining.

Libby’s heart had lodged itself somewhere near the top of her throat. She was speechless: shocked beyond belief and elated at the same time. Unable to get a single word out, both hands clamped over her mouth, she nodded. Her eyes filled with tears as he stood up and took her in his arms, holding her as closely as her bump allowed.

‘Was that nod a yes?’ he asked.

She nodded again, ‘Yes,’ she whispered. ‘It’s a yes!’ She squealed with excitement as he carefully took the ring out of the box and slid it on to her finger. It fitted perfectly. She threw her arms around him and kissed him over and over again.

‘I can’t believe you just did that,’ she laughed. ‘I literally had no idea!’

‘I can’t believe you said yes! I am the luckiest guy in the world.’

‘No, I am the luckiest girl,’ Libby told him. They hugged and kissed until Luca realised that their dinner was burning and had to dash over to the stove to rescue the food. After they had eaten and toasted their engagement with a bottle of champagne, they telephoned their nearest and dearest to share the happy news.

Her mum had been particularly delighted. She had finally got the news she needed to be able to hold her head up high among her friends. No one could comment on the scandalous baby story now that the relationship was going to end in marriage. It was a happy ending all round. Except for Helen. Libby felt awful telling her. She might have got the order all wrong, boyfriend, baby, fiancé, but now it all seemed to be working out just as she would have hoped. Helen, on the other hand, was still single – and unhappily so. She was now thirty-nine, and Libby suspected it would be yet another bitter blow for her to hear that Luca had proposed, although she knew Helen would do her best to be happy for her sister. She would be coming back from Hong Kong in a month’s time, and Libby was determined to do whatever it took to help her start to enjoy life again. She would encourage her to go on antidepressants, which Libby was sure would get her into a more positive state of mind, help her set up some good online profiles and encourage her to go on lots of dates.

Libby had been given the all-clear to go into work on Tuesday following her day of rest. She couldn’t stop looking at her finger. ‘What the hell isthat?’ shrieked Sam, clocking the ring within seconds of seeing Libby arrive in the office. ‘OMG! Tammy, get over here,now,’ she shouted.

Tammy clattered over in her high heels, a huge grin beaming across her lovely face as she realised what had happened. ‘Congratulations,’ she said, squeezing Libby around the shoulders. ‘What incredible news!’

‘What happened to you yesterday?’ asked Sam. ‘I thought you were off for medical reasons but now I realise maybe you were celebrating…?’

‘No, I had to go into hospital. He only proposed last night.’ Libby filled them in on the dramatic events of the weekend.

‘What an incredible story! What drama,’ Sam said.

‘What a way to propose,’ agreed Tammy. ‘It’s so romantic!’

‘When will you get married?’ asked Sam.

‘We’ve decided not to set a date for the time being, just to enjoy being engaged. We certainly wouldn’t do anything till after the baby comes, anyway, and then I hardly think we’ll be in a position to be planning a wedding any time soon.’

‘I think too many people rush into the wedding. I like to see engagement as another step between being boyfriend and girlfriend and husband and wife,’ said Tammy, who herself had been engaged to Jake for quite some time and still had no date set for a wedding. Libby liked that idea. There would be plenty of time for all that later, but right now she was just glad to have a ring on her finger and the security that came with it. No more pitying glances for her as people clocked her bump and looked to her ring finger to see whether her pregnancy was planned. God forbid you planned a pregnancy out of wedlock, as many couples did these days. She was often tempted to tell people to mind their own business when she realised the assumptions they were making, but she knew there was no point. People wouldn’t change their ways because of her.