She Sent a Cruel Baby Shower Invite. The DNA Report Ruined Everything-olive

My name is Emily Carter, and for a long time I believed grief made people quiet.

I thought humiliation made you smaller.

I thought betrayal hollowed you out until all you could do was sit in rooms you once loved and wonder how strangers had learned to laugh in your place.

Image

Then Jessica Reynolds mailed me a baby shower invitation.

One year after stealing my husband, my former best friend mailed me a baby shower invitation with a cruel message: Sorry you could never give him a son.

She thought she was reopening an old wound.

What she didn’t know was that sitting on my kitchen counter was a DNA report proving my ex-husband could never have fathered her baby—and identifying the real father as his own brother.

The envelope arrived on a rainy afternoon in Charleston, South Carolina.

Rainwater ran down the kitchen windows in crooked silver lines, and the low-country sky pressed gray against the glass.

The house smelled like coffee, wet pavement, and the faint lemon oil I used on the old walnut table every Friday morning because routine was one of the few things the divorce had not taken from me.

The envelope itself was beautiful.

Cream-colored.

Thick stock.

Expensive stationery.

The kind of paper Jessica would have chosen because she believed presentation could make cruelty look elegant.

It was drenched in her perfume.

That was the first thing that hit me.

Not the handwriting.

Not the return address.

The perfume.

Jessica had always done that.

When we were twenty-four and broke and eating takeout on my apartment floor, she sprayed perfume before job interviews because she said confidence needed a scent.

When I married Michael Reynolds at thirty, she sprayed the same perfume in the bridal suite before pinning my veil.

She had stood behind me in the mirror that morning, hands steady at the back of my head, smiling like she loved me.

She had been my maid of honor.

Read More