NOVEL Sweet Love 2x: Miss Ruthless CEO for our Superstar Uncle Chapter 337: Second Mommy
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Chapter 337: Second Mommy

Friday afternoon. The school pickup zone was crowded with parents and cars and the particular chaos of children released into the weekend. Arianne arrived a few minutes early and found Julian already there, leaning against his car with his arms crossed, watching the doors like he was waiting for a verdict.

"Gilbert and Audrey postponed the wedding," he said as she approached. "Late March now. His fiscal year assessment at Pemberton is taking longer than expected, and the schedule conflict was unavoidable."

Arianne nodded. She’d heard rumblings from Gilbert’s office, but nothing confirmed. "Was Audrey upset?"

"That’s what I asked him." Julian shook his head. "Apparently not. She’s relieved. She’s handling most of the wedding preparations herself, and the extra weeks give her more breathing room. She said something about finally having time to choose between two identical shades of ivory for the tablecloths."

"Audrey said that?"

"Gilbert said Audrey said that. He sounded bewildered."

Arianne almost smiled. "He would be."

The school bell rang before Julian could respond. Children began streaming through the doors in waves, backpacks bouncing, lunch bags swinging. Lily and Leo emerged together, Lily already mid-sentence about something, her hands gesturing, Leo listening with the whale under one arm and his tablet in the other. A few classmates trailed behind them, caught up in the post-bell energy of the day.

One of them, a girl with pigtails, looked up at Arianne as the group approached the pickup zone. She tugged at Lily’s sleeve.

"Is she your mommy?"

The question was loud enough to carry. Loud enough for Arianne to hear. Loud enough for Julian to hear, his eyebrows lifting as he glanced toward her.

Lily looked at Leo. Leo looked back at her. Something passed between them—the silent communication they’d shared since birth, the wordless negotiation that needed no translation. Leo nodded.

"Yes," Lily said. Her voice was clear and certain. "She’s our mommy."

The girl with pigtails accepted this without further inquiry. "She’s pretty," she said, and then ran off toward her own parent.

Julian was smiling. He didn’t say anything. He didn’t need to. Arianne stood without moving, the words settling into her chest like something heavy and warm.

Kyle arrived a moment later, his backpack dragging off one shoulder, his shoelaces untied. "Can I spend the evening with Lily and Leo? It’s Friday. We could build a fort. A bigger one than last time. With multiple rooms."

"You should ask Aunt Arianne and the twins," Julian said. "Not me."

Kyle turned to them with the full force of his enthusiasm. "Can I? Please? I brought my dinosaur collection. All of them. Even the pterodactyl."

Lily shook her head. "We can’t. Grandma Amanda is picking us up tonight. We’ll be back on Sunday. We can do an overnight next week. Maybe Wednesday. Leo’s therapy is on Tuesday, so Wednesday is better."

Kyle absorbed this with the resilience of a child accustomed to negotiating schedules. "Wednesday works. I’ll tell my dad." He turned to Julian. "Wednesday works."

"I heard."

"You have to remember."

"I’ll remember."

"You didn’t remember last time."

"That was one time."

"It was three times."

Julian sighed. "Wednesday. Duly noted."

The drive home was bright with February sunlight, pale and clean through the car windows. Lily sat in the backseat beside Leo, her seatbelt fastened, her backpack at her feet. She was talking—about the Valentine’s activities at school, the cards they’d made, the candy they’d exchanged.

"Leo won the best drawing," she announced. "Out of everyone. The judge said his drawing had ’emotional resonance.’ I don’t know what that means, but it sounds important."

Arianne glanced in the rearview mirror. Leo was looking out the window, but his reflection showed the edges of a smile. "Congratulations, Leo."

Leo turned from the window. The smile was back—wide and genuine, the kind that transformed his whole face. The kind that had been missing for so long after the accident, and was now appearing more and more often.

"Show her the drawing," Lily prompted. "When we get home. Show Mommy Aria the drawing."

The name slipped out before Lily seemed to realize she’d said it. She paused, glancing at Leo. Leo nodded. Neither of them took it back.

Arianne kept her eyes on the road. She said nothing. But her hands on the steering wheel tightened, just a fraction, and in the rearview mirror, Leo’s smile widened.

At the estate, the twins were gathering their overnight bags for their grandmother’s house. Amanda was coming to pick them up, though she hadn’t arrived yet. Lily was packing Petal and a book about constellations. Leo was placing the Lion in his overnight bag alongside the whale.

Before they finished, Arianne knelt to Lily’s level. The question had been waiting since the school pickup zone. She couldn’t let it pass.

"What you said earlier," she said. "At school. That I’m your mommy. Did you mean it?"

Lily nodded without hesitation. "Mommy is our forever mommy. She’ll always be our mommy." She said it as fact, as certainty. "But you’re Mommy Aria. Can Leo and I call you that?"

"Mommy Aria."

"It’s like having an extra mommy. But not an extra. More like a second one. Leo and I talked about it. We asked Uncle Franz if we could be his babies until the real baby comes, and he said yes. But we forgot to ask you." She looked up at Arianne with dark, steady eyes. "Do you not like it? Being our Mommy Aria?" ƒrēewebnovel.com

Arianne didn’t answer immediately. The question was simple. The answer was not. She thought about her own mother, who had rarely held her, whose last words had been a curse — and the years she’d spent believing she didn’t know how to be a mother because she’d never had one who wanted her. She thought about the twins, who had lost their parents and found room to love someone new.

"I don’t know how to be a mother," she said finally. "My own mother was not—she didn’t—" She paused. "I don’t know if I can fulfill that role. The way you deserve."

Lily listened. Her head tilted, the way it always did when she was processing something important. Then she spoke, her voice matter-of-fact.

"You’re different from our real mommy. Mommy Layla was very huggy. She smelled like flour and she sang while she cooked and she always wanted to hold us, even when we were too big. You’re not like that. You don’t hug as much. You don’t sing. You work a lot, and sometimes you forget to smile."

Arianne absorbed this. It was all true.

"But you love us," Lily continued. "You never raise your voice at us. Even when we’re bad. Even when Leo pushed me and broke the Lion, you didn’t yell. You just fixed it. You listen when I talk, even when I talk for a very long time. You came to the school when Bradley was mean to us and you made his parents afraid." She paused. "That’s what a mommy does. It’s just different from how our first mommy did it."

Leo had come to stand beside his sister. He typed something on his tablet and held it up: MOMMY ARIA IS GOOD MOMMY.

Lily read it and nodded. "Leo agrees. We both agree. The baby will be lucky, because you’ll love it the way you love us. And Uncle Franz will love it. And we’ll love it too. It will have a whole family."

Arianne looked at the tablet screen. At Leo’s steady gaze behind it. At Lily, who had just explained motherhood to her with the clarity of a five-year-old who understood more than most adults.

"Okay," she said. Her voice came out rougher than she intended. "Mommy Aria. I can do that." fгeewebnovёl.com

Lily beamed. Leo typed: GOOD.

The front door opened.

Arianne turned. Franz stepped inside, his hair tied back, his face tired but smiling. He was here. He was supposed to be on set. The calendar on the refrigerator had said nothing about his return.

"Surprise," he said.

The twins rushed to him immediately. Neither of them looked surprised. Lily flung her arms around his leg. Leo pressed against his side. They had known. They had helped plan this.

"The calendar didn’t mention you coming home," Arianne said.

"Lily didn’t mark it. I asked her not to." He crossed to her, his bag dropping to the floor. "The production is ahead of schedule for once. I finished early. I’m taking you to dinner." He cupped her face in his hands. "Happy Valentine’s Day. Or close enough."

She didn’t answer with words. She reached up and covered his hands with hers, and she held them there, against her face, in the warmth of the foyer.

"It’s all right," she said. "Go get ready. You’re taking me to dinner."

He smiled. Pressed a kiss to her forehead. "Yes, my dear."

She swatted his arm. He laughed, and the sound filled the house.

A little later, Amanda arrived to pick up the twins. Vincent wasn’t with her; he had decided to wait at home, she explained, waving off Arianne’s question before it was fully asked. "He sends his love. And his instructions to feed them vegetables, which I will honor in spirit if not in practice."

The twins were bundled into the car with their overnight bags and comfort objects. Amanda paused at the door, looking at Franz with genuine surprise and delight.

"I didn’t know you were coming home. This is wonderful. You two enjoy your evening." She smiled at Arianne. "Don’t worry about the twins. I’ll have them back on Sunday."

The car pulled away down the drive. The house settled into silence.

Arianne stood in the foyer, Franz beside her. The wedding photo hung on the wall, the four of them together, the portrait that Lily had insisted be the first thing anyone saw when they walked through the door. The calendar on the refrigerator was marked with the twins’ weekend away, and beside it, the square that should have shown Franz’s return was conspicuously, pointedly blank.

"Mommy Aria," Franz said, testing the name. "It suits you."

Lily had called Arianne that before leaving.

"It was Lily’s idea."

"It would be." He took her hand. "Go get changed. I have reservations."

"For what time?"

"Soon enough that you should hurry. Not so soon that you should panic."

"That’s very specific."

"I’ve been planning this for two weeks with a five-year-old co-conspirator. I’ve learned to be specific." He pressed a kiss to her knuckles. "Wear the dark dress. The one from the anniversary dinner."

"You remember what I wore to the anniversary dinner?"

"I remember everything you’ve ever worn. I’ve been paying attention for years."

She looked at him: the longer hair, the tired eyes, the husband who had conspired with the twins to surprise her on a Friday afternoon in February.

"That is a long time," she said.

"It went by faster than you’d think."

She didn’t answer. But her hand tightened on his, and she held it all the way up the stairs.

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