My Sister Announced She Was Pregnant With My Husband’s Child-hothiyenvy_5

The night my sister told me she was pregnant with my husband’s child, I was wearing the navy dress David used to love.

He used to call it the untouchable dress.

He said it made me look like I had walked out of a boardroom already knowing everyone else’s secrets.

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That afternoon, standing in front of the mirror in our apartment, I had smiled at myself for the first time in weeks.

The dress still fit the way it always had.

The zipper was cool under my fingers.

My perfume settled lightly on my wrists, and from the kitchen, the dishwasher made that low familiar hum that always meant I had forgotten to unload it before work.

None of it felt important then.

I had just been promoted.

Four years at the tech company had led to one letter on Malcolm Reid’s desk, printed on thick paper, my name beneath a title I had once only practiced under my breath.

Commercial Director.

Forty percent salary increase.

Sixteen thousand a month before bonuses.

International expansion portfolio.

Equity review.

Malcolm had slid the offer letter across the desk at 4:18 p.m. with the same serious face he used when a client contract was on fire.

“Congratulations, Marina,” he said.

I thought something had gone wrong until I saw the word Congratulations on the page.

For a few seconds, I could not answer him.

I had been the reliable one for so long that I almost did not know what to do with celebration.

Reliable women are strange creatures.

People praise them for holding everything together, then act surprised when their hands finally stop shaking.

I had worked through birthdays, through migraines, through the kind of exhaustion that makes a woman eat crackers over her laptop at 10:30 at night and call it dinner.

I had taken calls from Europe before sunrise and revised board decks after midnight.

I had sat in rooms where men twice my age tried to talk over me until they realized I had built the model, checked the numbers, and already prepared for their objections.

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