a day in the life

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Y/N never asked Harry to live with her.

They never had a conversation about it, instead just deciding to go to her house after she and Clementine were released from the hospital because it would likely be easier to recover in her own space — all of her lactation gear was there, along with the three (3!) different pregnancy pillows Harry purchased for her throughout the duration of the pregnancy.

But then he just never... left.

In hindsight, despite neither of them bringing it up, they both recognize that it's a way past overdue discussion. Someone should've been like, "hey, I know we've only been dating for like four months or so and we're having a baby together, but should we live in the same space, maybe? Just for ease of parenting and all that?".

Surprisingly, though, since Y/N very much appreciates her own room — she didn't do well in college when she had a roommate in their dorm, and she's very much an introvert that adores heading home at the end of the long day and simply being alone — she hasn't completely hated Harry being around all the time. It's the most that they've ever spent time together, a whopping three and a half weeks straight since Clementine was born.

It's a different kind of time, though, considering a newborn's schedule is unlike anything else. They alternate between who gets to nap during the day and while Y/N is technically cleared for recovery, she still aches like... well, like she pushed an entire body through her. (Even when she tears up looking at Clementine nearly every day, she still shudders at the thought of giving birth. Harry called it the most beautiful thing he's ever seen and she sincerely wonders if he's mentally well.)

And somehow, they've developed a schedule that works quite well, for now at least. Clementine, their sweet little baby girl, is a decent sleeper. Per all those parenting books Harry obsessed over for nine months, she spends most of her time sleeping, with multiple feeding times throughout the day and night.

When Harry and Y/N both manage to be awake and conscious during the day, they hover over her bassinet — well, formerly in Y/N's room, but now it seems to be Y/N's plus Harry's room? — quietly leaning in to make sure she's breathing okay, admiring her cute little face, and taking pictures of the adorable onesies Harry puts her in. They have visitors, of course, including both pairs of their parents, siblings, and mutual friends. There's a lot of crying and smiling and, oddly enough, entertaining, which is silly considering they're still brand new parents who are working off of two- or three-hour incremental naps.

In terms of their dynamic, things shift slightly, but Y/N is still the grump Harry adores. She's exhausted, understandably so. The whole breastfeeding thing wreaks havoc on her body and Clementine doesn't love it, so she tries her best to regularly pump milk for her, but she hates sitting on the couch, asking Harry to turn on some stupid reality show to distract her, and feeling the machine push and prod at her breasts.

"This makes me feel like a cow," she'd huffed the first time they did it, and it made Harry snort so loud he had to excuse himself from the room.

But Harry... he's good, even if it's difficult for Y/N to properly communicate that to him. She knows she got very lucky with him, not just from a partnership standpoint — which, that's an entirely different conversation that they haven't gotten to yet — but a parenting one, too. He has no reason to get up with her at 3 am because Clem's doing her sweet little lamb cries from the corner of their bedroom. Y/N can very easily escape to the room she designated as her nursery months back, where there's a comfy nursing chair her mother bought her, but instead Harry's up before Y/N's eyes are even properly open, gently placing her in her arms and pushing a warm bottle into her hand.

He insists on helping her with every feeding, taking on more diaper changes than Y/N, and even doing his best to take care of her along the way. He helps her into the bath when her bones and joints are too achy to stand in the shower, he never complains about cooking them dinner (if Y/N orders food one more time, she thinks her bank will call her and ask if she's been taken hostage by one of those ordering apps), and, even with her heightened hormones and emotions, she does indeed cry helplessly, salty tears leaking onto her daughter's forehead when Harry comes home one day with a bouquet of flowers, a tidy note in the front that says "for my girls".

It makes him laugh so hard, the sight of his cranky girl in her milk-stained robe standing in the kitchen, gently rocking Clementine as she holds the pretty stems.

"Why are you laughing?" Y/N sniffs, lifting her hand to quickly wipe tears away from her cheeks.

"Because you just look so cute right now," he says with a grin. He takes the flowers back from her, murmuring out something about putting them in a vase.

"Sometimes I do wonder if you're certifiably insane." Y/N mutters, partially to herself. When she glances down at a milk drunk Clem, a smile quirks at the edges of her lips. "What do you think, Clemmie? Is dada crazy?"

Harry knows that this isn't the traditional family he dreamed about, that having a baby with Y/N was a risk he was only willing to take because he always wanted to be a dad — but shit, he's so happy.

(Y/N is, too. She's over the moon, with the way gratitude feels like it fills up her body in a way she's never experienced before. And she knows she's awful at expressing her feelings, but when she glances back up at Harry, eyes twinkling with a healthy blush over her cheeks and a smile on her lips, he knows. He just knows.)

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