Rachel Steele Pregnant <Mobile>

The first sign was the compass. An old, tarnished thing she’d found in a box of unsorted donations. When she picked it up, the needle didn’t point north. It pointed at her. Then it spun, wild and joyous, before settling on a direction—south, toward her own heart. She laughed it off, but that night, the nausea began.

The pregnancy progressed, and strange things happened. Shadows would lean toward her, curious. Lost keys would roll across the floor to her feet. And once, when she tripped on the stairs, she didn’t fall—she floated, just for a second, the baby’s heartbeat syncing with the compass’s gentle spin. rachel steele pregnant

The baby girl had Rachel’s dark hair and Leo’s impossible silver eyes. But more than that, when Rachel held her, she could see things—flickering images of Leo standing on a misty shore, turning, smiling, touching his heart. She felt the places he’d gone, the maps he’d drawn between stars. The first sign was the compass

The pregnancy was anything but normal. She craved not pickles and ice cream, but ink and old parchment. She’d wake at 3 AM with a taste of sea salt on her tongue, dreaming of lighthouse beams and unmarked maps. The baby kicked in patterns—three short, one long, like a Morse code she almost understood. Juniper, the cat, stopped sleeping on the register and started sleeping directly on her belly, purring a deep, resonant hum that felt like a lullaby. It pointed at her

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