My Sister Turned a DNA Test Into a Trap Inside Her Own House-kieutrinh

I thought a DNA test would end the drama.

It didn’t.

My sister looked at my baby and decided her husband was the father, and then she started trying to make that lie come true.

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My name is Ava, and when Noah was born, I was twenty-four, broke, grieving, and more tired than I knew a person could be without actually falling apart.

The house where I brought him home belonged to my older sister Nora and her husband, Ben.

It was a normal-looking place from the outside, the kind of suburban house with a narrow driveway, a mailbox by the curb, and a small American flag stuck in a flowerpot near the porch steps.

Inside, it smelled like baby detergent, microwave coffee, and the lemon cleaner Nora used when she wanted to feel in control.

That was Nora’s thing.

Control.

After our mom died, she became the one who remembered everything.

She knew when the electric bill was due.

She knew which cousin needed a birthday card.

She knew where Mom had kept the spare insurance paperwork and which casserole dish belonged to which aunt after a holiday.

When I got pregnant, she was the first person I told because, for most of my life, she had been the person I ran to before I ran anywhere else.

She cried with me.

She drove me to two appointments when I was too nauseous to drive myself.

She brought me ginger ale, crackers, and a soft gray blanket she said would look good in a nursery someday.

When money got tight, she told me I could take the spare room until I finished school and got steady again.

“It’s temporary,” she said, standing in her kitchen with a dish towel over one shoulder.

Ben nodded from the sink.

“We’ve got space,” he said. “You and the baby will be safe here.”

At the time, I believed both of them.

Ben and I had known each other before Nora ever dated him.

We were friends first, the kind of friends who sent each other songs, made dry jokes at family gatherings, and both stayed quiet in loud rooms because loud rooms always felt like work.

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