My Sister Drugged My Daughter At A Birthday Party And Smirked-kieutrinh

Hazel’s seventh birthday looked like the kind of party people post online with a caption about blessings.

Pink balloons floated along the porch rail.

A pale ribbon was tied around the mailbox.

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The backyard smelled like buttercream frosting, cut grass, sunscreen, and the vanilla candles Brooke had set out even though it was the middle of the afternoon.

The cake sat in the center of the table under a plastic cover, three layers high, covered in pink roses and tiny gold stars.

It probably cost more than my first paycheck.

My sister Brooke kept walking past it with her phone out, tilting the camera until the frosting caught the light just right.

My mother, Margaret, stood near the patio door in a cream blouse, smiling at every guest like she was personally responsible for the sun being out.

Neighbors came through the side gate carrying gift bags.

Kids ran across the lawn with juice boxes and sticky fingers.

Hazel twirled in a dress with a tulle skirt, laughing every time someone told her she looked like a princess.

From the outside, it was beautiful.

That was always the danger with my family.

They knew how to make cruel things look pretty.

I stood near the picnic table with Lily’s hand tucked inside mine.

She was three years old, small for her age, with soft brown curls that never stayed clipped back and a serious little face that made strangers at the grocery store smile.

That afternoon she wore a yellow sundress she had picked herself.

She said it made her look sunny.

I had cried in the laundry room when she said that, because there had been a time when I thought I would never hear a child say anything to me at all.

Five miscarriages had changed the shape of my life.

IVF had changed the shape of our bank account.

There were still bills in a folder on my kitchen counter, still payment notices tucked under a magnet on the fridge, still a tightness in my chest whenever I saw the words balance due.

But Lily was worth every waiting room, every injection, every call that ended with bad news, every night I sat on the bathroom floor and wondered what was wrong with my body.

She was my miracle.

To Brooke and Margaret, she was a problem.

They never said it that cleanly, not in front of anyone.

My mother preferred little cuts.

“She is sensitive, isn’t she?”

“You do hover.”

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