My Sister Carried My Fiancé’s Baby. Then Dinner Went Silent-Ginny

The first thing Lindsay remembered was the fork.

Not Claire’s sentence.

Not her mother’s gasp.

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Not even her father’s chair scraping back from the table like the floor had shifted under him.

It was the fork hitting the plate, silver against porcelain, a clean little sound that made the whole room feel suddenly breakable.

The dining room smelled like pot roast, rosemary, and the lemon furniture polish her mother used every Thursday before family dinner.

The kitchen window was cracked open because late April had turned warm after an afternoon storm, and wet grass breathed into the house as if the night outside had no idea what was happening inside.

Three weeks before her wedding, Lindsay had arrived at her parents’ house with a folded cardigan over her arm and a to-do list in her purse.

The garden estate was booked.

The invitations had been mailed.

Her dress was hanging in her closet in a white garment bag that looked, in the dark, almost like a person waiting for her.

Daniel was supposed to become her husband in twenty-two days.

That number had lived in her head all week, bright and fluttering and ridiculous.

Twenty-two days until the ceremony.

Twenty-two days until the first dance.

Twenty-two days until she stopped calling him her fiancé and started calling him her husband.

Claire stood beside the sideboard in a pale blue sweater, blond hair tucked behind her ears, one trembling hand spread over her still-flat stomach.

She was twenty-three, five years younger than Lindsay, and she had always known how to look smaller than the damage she caused.

When she was seven, she had spilled grape juice across Lindsay’s science fair poster and cried so hard their mother made Lindsay apologize for upsetting her.

When she was sixteen, she dented their father’s car backing out of the driveway and somehow the family spent dinner discussing how frightened Claire must have been.

When she was twenty-three, she stood in the dining room and said, “I’m pregnant. And Daniel is the father.”

For a few seconds, nobody moved.

Lindsay heard the refrigerator humming in the kitchen.

She heard a dog bark somewhere down the block.

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