The DNA Report Wasn’t The End—The Attorney Call Was The Moment Everything Turned-QuynhTranJP

The phone vibrated once, hard enough to skid the legal pad an inch across the table. Abby’s fingers froze above the folder. For one second, nobody moved. The apartment was so quiet I could hear the refrigerator cycling on and off in the kitchen, hear the faint rush of tires on wet pavement outside, hear the thin, ugly sound of Abby swallowing down panic.

I looked at the screen. My attorney.

Abby saw the name at the same time and the color drained out of her face so fast it looked like somebody had pulled a plug. She knew what that call meant before I even answered it. This was no longer a private lie between a husband, a wife, and a sister-in-law with a grudge. It had crossed into paper, court, and consequences.

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“Put it on speaker,” Abby said, but the confidence was gone from her voice.

I did not answer her. I just tapped the screen.

“Dean,” my attorney said, his tone already clipped and professional, “I’ve got the clerk’s confirmation. Your petition is filed. The temporary financial hold request is in. I also need you to forward me the DNA report as soon as this call ends. We’re moving faster than I expected.”

Abby made a small noise in the back of her throat. Not a sob. Not yet. More like the sound a person makes when the floor has shifted but their body has not caught up.

I kept my eyes on her face. “Anything else?” I asked.

“Two things,” he said. “Your commander signed the support letter. That helps. And I received an email from your sister-in-law’s address with attached screenshots. She’s willing to provide a sworn statement if needed.”

Claire.

Abby’s hand shot to the folder and hit the top page, but it was too late. She had already seen the first line of the report when she reached for it. The number was there in plain black letters, colder than any accusation: Probability of paternity 0%.

Her mouth opened. Closed. Opened again.

“No,” she whispered. “No, that’s not possible.”

My attorney kept talking, but I muted him and set the phone faceup on the table. There was no reason to let him hear the rest of this part. I had already heard enough in five years to know what a well-rehearsed lie sounded like when it started to crack.

Abby took one step backward, her heel scraping the floor. She stared at the report like staring harder might change the numbers. Her mascara had bled into dark tracks beneath her eyes, and the hem of her blouse trembled in her grip. For the first time since I had known her, she looked smaller than the version of herself she used on everyone else.

“You had this done behind my back,” she said.

I picked up the folder and held it in both hands. “You lied to me for five years.”

“That’s not what happened.”

“It is exactly what happened.”

She shook her head too fast, like motion alone could scatter the truth. “Claire did this because she’s jealous. She’s always been jealous. You know how she is.”

I almost laughed. Not because anything was funny. Because the script was so familiar it was insulting. The same family that had always called Claire unstable was now handing me the same excuse with better packaging.

I slid the folder back onto the table. “You wrote to her,” I said. “You told her I could never find out. You said the timing worked because I was gone for training.”

The room changed when I said it. Not in some cinematic way. Just a subtle, physical shift, like the air had become heavier and the apartment had lost a little of its oxygen.

Abby’s shoulders tightened. “You went through my messages?”

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“You used my child as cover.”

“He is your child.”

“No,” I said. “He is the boy I raised.”

That landed harder than I expected. Her chin jerked up, and for a moment there was anger again, a flash of the old polished Abby trying to reclaim the room. “You think this is easy for me? You think I didn’t make a mistake and then spend years trying to protect this family?”

I looked at her, really looked at her, and saw something I had missed for years: not remorse, not even fear. Calculation. Always calculation.

“You didn’t protect this family,” I said. “You protected yourself.”

The silence after that was thick enough to touch. She reached for the report again, then stopped. Her fingers hovered over the paper as if touching it might somehow make it real, and in that little hesitation I saw the difference between us. I had spent the last week preparing for a truth I did not want. She had spent five years preparing for the day it would never be spoken aloud.

My phone lit up again. This time it was Claire.

Abby saw the name and flinched. I answered without taking my eyes off her.

“He got the results?” Claire asked.

“Yes.”

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