My Husband Hit My Sister’s Baby Bump — Then The Sonogram Label Exposed Who Was Really…

The officer’s question hung over the backyard while the punch bowl kept dripping pink liquid onto the concrete.

Nobody moved toward Lina.

Nobody moved toward Daniel.

A balloon popped somewhere near the fence, sharp and ugly, and my mother flinched so hard her phone almost slipped from her hand. The police cruiser lights washed red over the white chairs, over the torn gift wrap, over the framed sonogram in my grip.

The officer looked at Lina’s twisted blue dress, then at the exposed buckle beneath it.

‘Ma’am,’ he said carefully, ‘I need you to stand up.’

Lina didn’t.

She kept one hand pressed over the fake curve like she could still protect the lie from fifty witnesses.

Before that afternoon, Lina and I had been the kind of sisters people called close because the photographs looked that way.

We shared hotel beds on family trips. We split pancakes at midnight after bad dates. When our grandmother died, Lina slept on my couch for three nights with her mascara on my pillowcase and my old college sweatshirt wrapped around her shoulders.

She was younger by four years, but my parents had always treated her like something breakable. If Lina forgot rent, Dad covered it. If Lina cried at dinner, Mom slid my plate toward her and told me I could make another one.

I learned to be useful early.

Useful daughters drove to pharmacies at 11:30 p.m. Useful daughters kept receipts. Useful daughters smiled when the family baby took center stage.

When Lina announced she was pregnant, my mother dropped a coffee mug on the kitchen tile and cried before she asked who the father was.

Lina said the father wasn’t involved.

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