I had just left the notary and felt happier than I had in years.
There were gifts in the back seat for my future grandson—tiny blue booties, a plush elephant, and a silver baby rattle I had picked up after the appointment because I wanted to celebrate properly. I had also just signed the documents transferring my late husband’s lake cottage into a family trust that would one day belong to my son Ethan’s child. I believed I was securing something meaningful for the next generation. I thought I was heading home to make them happy.
Instead, through a half-open side window, I saw my daughter-in-law remove a fake pregnant belly and toss it onto my son’s couch.
Then I heard her laugh.
I had parked outside their townhouse holding gift bags and a folder from the notary, already picturing Vanessa tearing up when I told her the cottage would be set aside for the baby. She had been seven months pregnant—or so I thought. For months, she had played the role perfectly: slow steps, a hand pressed to her lower back, tired smiles, nursery paint samples, ultrasound photos I had only seen printed, never in a clinic. She cried when I told her a child changes everything. She let me rub lotion on her “swollen ankles” while calling me Mom.
And I believed every moment of it.
As I walked past the side of their townhouse, voices drifted through the slightly open living room window. I never would have stopped intentionally. But then I heard Vanessa say, clearly and casually, “I swear, I can’t wear that stupid thing one more week. It itches.”
I froze.
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