“Promise me you won’t do anything with that kit,” he said.
“Greg, what are you talking about?”
“We don’t need to know everything, Sue.”
**
He started lingering in the hallway after dinner, watching Tiffany set the table like she was some rare painting he wouldn’t see again.
One night I asked, “Everything okay?”
“Greg, what are you talking about?”
“Just tired. It’s been a long week, Sue.”
Two mornings later, I saw his mug on the counter, and my mind started spinning.
Tiffany wandered in, rubbing her eyes. “Mom, can we finish my trait chart after school?”
“Of course,” I said. “We’ll do that straight after your snack.”
“It’s been a long week, Sue.”
When she left, I stood at the sink with Greg’s mug in one hand and a swab in the other. I didn’t want to be the wife who did this.
But I didn’t want to be the mother who looked away either.
“I’m not snooping,” I said aloud. “I’m parenting.”
I scraped the rim. Sealed the tube with one of the two swabs that Greg missed when throwing the kid away. I wrote his initials.
And then I mailed them.
**
“I’m not snooping.”
The results came the following Tuesday.
Greg was in the shower. I opened the email like it was a bomb about to go off.
And it did.
I stared at the “0% DNA Shared” line for so long, I forgot how to blink.
But it wasn’t the absence of the match that shook me. It was the presence of one.
Mike.
The results came the following Tuesday.
Tiffany’s godfather. Greg’s best friend since college. He was a man who had keys to my house.
I shut my laptop. My legs moved before my thoughts did. I walked into the bathroom and sat on the edge of the tub, numb, staring at the tiled floor.
I sat there until the water stopped and the curtain scraped open.
“Sue?”
I stood.
“We need to talk tonight,” I said. “Don’t stay late at work.”
I shut my laptop.
**
After school, I packed Tiffany’s overnight bag and dropped her off at my sister’s house.
“Is Dad coming?” she asked, hugging her unicorn pillow.
“Not this time, sweetie. We have to work late tonight, so I thought you’d like some time with Auntie Karen.”
**
That evening, I waited in the kitchen.
Greg came in.
“Sue?”
I slid my phone across the table — the results open. He looked at the screen.
“Is Dad coming?”
“Please… Sue…”
“Tell me why you have zero DNA in common with my daughter,” I said.
Greg gripped the back of a chair.
“She’s mine,” he whispered.
“Sure… but not biologically. Right?”
His jaw flexed.
“Please… Sue…”
“I couldn’t give you a baby, Sue. I tried so many times. And I failed. I was the reason we couldn’t do it.”
“So what, Greg? You borrowed Mike’s… genes without asking me?”
He didn’t answer.
“Did you forge my signature at the clinic?”
He stared at the floor. I tapped the screen once, right on ‘0% DNA Shared.’
He didn’t answer.
He finally spoke. “I didn’t have a choice.”
“You always had a choice,” I said. “You just didn’t like the ones that required honesty.”
**
I drove to Mike and Lindsay’s the next morning. She answered the door in gray leggings, coffee in hand.
“Sue? You look like you haven’t slept. What’s going on?”
“I need to talk to Mike. Now.”
Something in my face must have told her this wasn’t casual. She stepped aside.
“What’s going on?”
Mike came down the hallway. He stopped when he saw me.
“You knew? All this time?! You knew the truth about my daughter?”
He ran a hand over his face. “Sue…”
“Answer me.”
“I knew.”
Lindsay’s head snapped toward him. “You knew what?”
“You knew the truth about my daughter?”
Mike looked at me, not her.
“Greg was falling apart. He felt useless. He said you wanted a baby more than anything, and he couldn’t give you one. He asked for help.”
“Help? You call this… help?”
“We had an agreement,” Mike said quickly. “A gentleman’s agreement. No one would ever know. I wouldn’t be involved. It would just be… biology. He’d be the dad in every way that mattered.”
Lindsay stared at him like he had started speaking another language.
“You call this… help?”
“A gentleman’s agreement? About another woman’s body?” she gasped.
Mike’s voice cracked. “I thought I was saving your marriage. I thought I was… giving you a gift.”
Silence pressed in.
“You both decided,” Lindsay said quietly, “that we didn’t deserve the truth.”
Lindsay’s phone buzzed. Greg’s name flashed. She turned the screen toward us, answered, then put it on speaker.
“Don’t call my house again,” she said, voice flat, and ended it.
“A gentleman’s agreement?”
**
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