yours*

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Parenthood is difficult.

It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure that out, so it takes Harry and Y/N approximately two minutes of bringing Clementine into the world to come to the same realization. Her loud wails break their hearts every time, sleep becomes a luxury, and breastfeeding takes an incredible toll on Y/N's physical and mental health.

But in the same way that parenting is hard and filled with tears and confusion, it's just as — if not more — rewarding.

Clementine is the best thing that's ever happened to each of them. Harry can't remember a version of his life where he wasn't head-over-heels in love with his sweet baby girl, and Y/N has softened up a considerable amount now that she spends most of her day cooing to her daughter.

It's not perfect by any means — Clem is a tried-and-true daddy's girl and sometimes it hurts Y/N's feelings. Clementine also inherited her mom's grumpy exterior and, in the middle of a visit from Harry's parents or Y/N's sister, will starfish her body, going completely rigid until one of her parents takes her. (Harry always thinks it's funny while Y/N is embarrassed by it. It's something they're working on as a family.)

Beyond their little trio, though, lies a larger situation that's been conveniently tucked away since Clementine was born: Harry and Y/N's relationship.

They never decided what they were after confessing feelings for one another. One day, they lived separately and were going the route of platonic co-parenting. The next, Harry moved all his things into Y/N's, ended the lease on his own apartment, and painted the guest room a pretty pastel pink.

At first, it didn't seem like that big of a deal. Y/N has never cared for labels on relationships, and their devotion to each other was blatant — they were parenting a child together, after all. He kissed her good morning, they held hands on family walks, and at the end of the day, they were crawling into bed together. She didn't need a ring or a title to reiterate where she stood in Harry's life.

Until... well, until the supermarket incident.

It was a rainy day, but Y/N wanted to pop into the store before they rounded the corner to head back home. Now that Clementine's pediatrician gave them the okay to start trying out solid foods — or, as solid as baby food can be — Harry had gotten really into making it from scratch. Currently, their kitchen was a mess of sweet potato, apple, and green bean purees, but Y/N was trying to be supportive, even if the noise of the blender sometimes woke Clem up from her afternoon nap. She remembered him mentioning a new recipe he found for carrots, mangos, and bananas, so she figured they could grab the ingredients on their way home.

Clementine looked adorable in her cute little rain jacket and matching hat. Harry couldn't stop taking pictures of her, and as they dipped into the produce aisle, stroller in tow, she remembered they needed another gallon of milk since they were trying to wean Clem off of Y/N's breast milk.

"You guys can stay right here, it's just in the next aisle," Y/N said, arms stuffed with produce bags. Harry nodded, though his attention primarily laid on Clementine's gummy smile. Y/N snorted to herself as she quickly shuffled off to the dairy section — the duo were two peas in a pod, but she didn't think she would want it any other way.

Glancing down at her watch, she put a pep in her step as she walked back to the produce aisle. They had about 15 minutes before Clem started getting antsy and whiney about her pre-dinner nap, and she didn't want her to get upset on their walk home.

Only, when she turned the aisle, Harry and Clementine weren't alone anymore — no, there were two women standing with them, cooing over their daughter.

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