The Envelope Under the Fake Belly Turned a Baby Shower Into a Police Scene-yumihong

My mother pulled the hem of Lina’s blue dress back with two fingers, like the fabric itself might bite her.

The whole backyard watched.

The silicone belly shifted again. The strap had twisted sideways from Daniel’s hit, and beneath it, taped flat against Lina’s skin, was a cream envelope sealed with two strips of clear packing tape.

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My name was written across the front.

Not Mom’s.

Not Dad’s.

Mine.

Lina clamped both arms over her stomach, but she was too late. My father had already seen it. So had Daniel. So had the two police officers stepping through the side gate with their hands resting near their belts.

“Ma’am,” the older officer said, “move your hands slowly.”

Lina’s eyes snapped toward me.

“Tell them he attacked me,” she said.

Her voice had changed. The soft baby-shower sweetness was gone. It came out flat and sharp, the way she used to sound when we were kids and she wanted me to take the blame for something broken.

Daniel stood by the fence with one brother still gripping his shirt. His face had gone almost white, but he didn’t look away from me.

“Open it,” he said.

My mother turned on him.

“You don’t speak.”

Daniel nodded once, like he had expected that.

“I already did,” he said. “To Detective Harris. He’s three minutes out.”

That name changed the air.

My father’s hand tightened around Daniel’s phone. The sprinkler ticked against the fence. Someone’s abandoned cup rolled under a chair, leaving a wet trail of lemonade through the grass.

At 2:24 p.m., the second cruiser arrived.

Detective Harris was not in uniform. Gray blazer, loosened tie, weathered face, small notebook in one hand. He looked at Daniel first, then Lina on the ground, then the fake belly half-exposed under her dress.

“Everybody step back,” he said.

My brothers released Daniel.

One officer still moved him aside and patted him down. Daniel didn’t resist. He only lifted both hands, palms open, and said, “My phone is on the grass. The receipt is open.”

Detective Harris crouched near Lina.

“Ms. Lina Carter?”

She stared at him.

“I’m pregnant.”

“No,” he said quietly. “You’re not.”

My mother made a choking sound.

Lina’s face stiffened.

The detective pointed to the envelope. “That belongs to your sister?”

“It’s private.”

He looked up at me. “Are you Ava Carter Reed?”

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