“Tare,” she yells, “I’m doing the pee-test if you’re interested.”
Tara runs down the hallway and into the bathroom. She holds a stack of papers in her arms and looks eagerly at Willow.
Willow glances at her wife. “How is it that you’re not sick of watching me test my pee?”
“Check it,” Tara instructs
Totally loving this. Can't wait to see how this is going to continue. Can't wait till the next update.In the night, when honking cars and screeching birds shattered the calm of the street, they'd curl together, their breath mingling. Voices low and intense, they built their future in words.
So Tara would smile obligingly - luckily she had been blessed with the virtue of patience – and allow Willow to extract answers and opinions.
Willow had just smiled and said, "I need you to do it, baby," and nothing else had needed to be said.

"Baby? You made up that great-Aunt thing, didn't you?" Tara searches for a mental image of Willow's great-Aunt. The attitude-filled, scarlet-haired lady that springs to mind doesn't seem the type to talk about matters of the heart.
“Oh. Sorry!” Willow blushes. She covers the mouthpiece and turns to Tara. “Eek, wrong guy.”
Willow didn’t answer. She let me figure it out.
Willow is in the bathroom, urinating. With a yawn, she unwraps the purple drugstore bag, and takes out the urine test kit.
“Tare,” she yells, “I’m doing the pee-test if you’re interested.”
“Don’t forget to elevate your rear with a pillow! You don’t want the semen to leak out of you,” he calls after them, to the amusement of several couples in the waiting room.
'Lesbians are the most impatient,’ he laments
Willow shrugs. “Seriously, Tare, what if it’s not going to work? It’s possible that my vagina just doesn’t accept sperm. Maybe in my constitution there’s some blatant rule. There is to be no semen allowed inside the premises; all semen, please stay outside the gate. Sorry for any inconvenience.”
. Love sam xx
"Baby? You made up that great-Aunt thing, didn't you?" Tara searches for a mental image of Willow's great-Aunt. The attitude-filled, scarlet-haired lady that springs to mind doesn't seem the type to talk about matters of the heart.
Willow swats her, playfully. “Lia seemed to think I was going to be giving birth any minute. Tara, maybe I have a pregnant glow.”
Tara laughs. “There’s only one hole in that theory. You’re not pregnant, honey.” She switches off the DVD player and turns over to spoon Willow, however Willow has already climbed out of bed and is rummaging through a drawer. Tara sighs. She loves her wife’s whimsical nature but sometimes it’s inconvenient. Especially when a girl wants to spoon.
. Love sam xx“Seriously, Tare, what if it’s not going to work? It’s possible that my vagina just doesn’t accept sperm. Maybe in my constitution there’s some blatant rule. There is to be no semen allowed inside the premises; all semen, please stay outside the gate. Sorry for any inconvenience.”
Expecting pregnancy, not expecting a baby
Willow pushes her gently back into her chair. “Hey,” she leans forward and kisses the soft lips, savouring the taste of her wife. “I appreciate it, I do. But I’m not sure I want to fight them on this.”
“Your ears are so cute.”

One of them could barely restrain himself. “David,” he called out to a man twirling chopsticks in a wide bowl.
David, clearly startled, pushed back his chair and approached the men.
The man that had called to him began to speak, and his voice trembled. “On Friday, San Francisco will let gay couples marry at City Hall.”
David just stared at him.
His boyfriend whispered into his ear and I saw something change on David’s face.
I watched as the two men wrapped themselves together, fingers locking their hands and tears moistening their cheeks.
The world fell away. It was as though it were a canvas and a troubled painter had thrown white paint directly at it, until the people and colors and objects were reduced to fragments, spots and stripes.

They were the only words she said. We didn’t need a billboard announcement, a fancy diamond or even eloquence. All we had, and all we needed, was Willow, me, five monosyllabic words and a cheap ring that we had almost decided not to buy.
the look that means she has a question that won’t wait until the movie finishes.
She loves her wife’s whimsical nature but sometimes it’s inconvenient. Especially when a girl wants to spoon.
She wears a maternity dress given to her by her mother. Sure, her mom had leant her the dress and said “this will probably fit you during your third trimester,” but she doesn’t care.
The thin, blue material doesn’t touch either of her hips. It hangs awkwardly, swinging as she walks. She puts a jacket over the dress and does up the buttons, wondering how long it will take until she has to buy larger clothing sizes.
"I guess they didn't teach you this at school," she'd said to Willow, "but law firms require presentation." Ouch, Willow had thought.
The young boy is full of questions. Is it true that she’s gay because whoa, he’s never met anyone gay before. He wants to know if Tara is going to be mom or dad. He’s curious about how they got pregnant. And, finally, he asks what Willow is going to do to occupy herself over the coming months.
She walks into the house, her eyes travelling over the furniture and walls as though seeing them for the first time. “Well, house, it’s gonna be just you and me for a long, long time.”

Tara laughs. "You wanted to look fat, remember? That was the point." She rolls her eyes at Willow. "Anyway, I thought you were against society's obsession with looking slim."

When they arrive, the party is in full swing. That is, Rosenberg full swing, which means that most of the men are seated, complaining about their sore backs and wives, while the women congregate in the kitchen.
Willow puts down the salad utensils and turns to face the pair. "Wife," she says, politely but firmly.
"Now Willow, let's not get political." The relative smiles.
"Well, I'm sure it was hard for you, Willow. We were all upset for you when we heard the news. But I wasn't surprised." The look on his face says that he wasn't too bothered, either. "It's not like you're not allowed to be a couple. You just can't marry."
"Actually," she replies, surprising herself, "it wasn't hard. We didn't have to do anything. One minute we were a married couple and the next minute that status had been taken from us."
The relative raises an eyebrow.
"But," the blonde continues, "if I were to summarize how it was, I'd personally use the term soul destroying." She smiles at Willow. "Would you agree, honey?"
By then, we'd done the typical things. We'd carried each other - with difficulty - through the doorway of our house, giggling madly. We invited friends over to use the fondue set we'd received as a wedding present, dancing to sixties music and stringing up rainbow lights in our lounge room. We were able to check the box "married" and fill in the "name of spouse" line on medical forms, ignoring the looks we received.
The best part was that we could officially refer to each other as wife. It felt strange at first; the word seemed clumsy on my tongue. I'd start to introduce Willow to a colleague as my girlfriend or partner, and then I'd stumble and correct myself. Wife. Gradually, it felt good to use the word.
As humans do, we began to take it for granted. No longer did I pause to grin at Willow whenever I used the line "my wife and I...". It wasn't that we were greedy or unappreciative, but like most couples, we moved on.
"Hey there," I whispered, my eyes glued to the spider, "you've got hairy legs, little lady. Your legs even compete with mine." I laughed out loud at my own lame joke, thinking of our unused razor.
"Well, I guess I better get used to saying this again." She sat up, a strange look on her face, pretending to greet someone. "Let me introduce you to my girlfriend, Tara."
Samantha had chuckled and told the table about the time that Sheila was diagnosed with thrush by her disgusted boyfriend, who was a medical student.
The old woman nods dismissively. "Serious shmerious," she says. "Now, on to more interesting things." Her eyes travel slowly, deliberately, until focussing on Willow's stomach. She swivels her head until she faces Tara. "So," she says, a smile in her voice, "you knocked her up at last."
. Love sam xx
Dumbass close minded relatives. Good thing it is a once a year encounter. I too hated the lurking Sheila. Perhaps if she wasn't such a B&$^h, she might not have to steal conversation.

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