I think I see a spike or the spike cover (whatever the technical term for that is) emerging in the second picture though.
You can tell by the size and the shape of it.
Almost always, newer leaf will be larger than the previous ones. When a newer leaf is smaller (you can usually tell even when the new leaf is quite small and narrower or sharper in shape, say less than one inch long), you know it is the last leaf (or spike cover whatever) and the spike will soon follow.
Sometimes, spike will emerge without this shorter than normal leaf (or cover whatever the real name is).
Your plant all look healthy though.
As someone pointed out above, some paphs will every once in a while throw a multiple growths and once this happens, you hit a jackpot because not only this means you see a few flowers at the same time, each of these multiple growths will also grow its own "baby" and throw out more growths, all of them growing at a different rate thus giving you more frequent bloom (this depends on the type. some plants even with multiple growths do not bloom more frequent but definately more flowers at each bloom season).
and yet, some plants will hardly ever make multiple growths even after years of good culture. It is just how they grow. One flower at a time.
Pleasant exceptions can take place though.
One of my maudiae alba that I like, always grew one growth at a time, but grow quite fast and bloom at least twice a year. bloom lasts for three months. can't really complain.
When old growths accumulated over time, I decided to divide it into two. I gave one away and kept the other one. This other one I kept started four new growths although it later aborted two and only grew two. still that is one step up.
---------- Post added at 02:53 AM ---------- Previous post was at 02:52 AM ----------
One more thought, I don't know why but sometimes mature leads will wait until other younger leads mature and then they all come into bloom together.