So when she called a family gathering three months after my miscarriage, I should have known something was coming.
At my parents’ house, everything felt almost normal—Mom’s pot roast, Dad carving meat, Aunt Sharon complaining about neighbors—until Delaney tapped her wine glass.
“Everyone, I have an announcement,” she said, voice trembling just enough to draw attention.
Mom’s face lit up. “Oh, honey, what is it?”
Delaney placed a hand on her stomach, eyes shining.
“I’m pregnant!”
The room erupted. Mom screamed and hugged her, Aunt Sharon cried, Dad looked proud.
I sat frozen, feeling slapped.
“But there’s more,” Delaney continued, tears flowing. “The father… he doesn’t want anything to do with us. He left me. Said he wasn’t ready to be a dad.”
Gasps. Sympathy. Promises of support.
No one looked at me. No one asked how I was doing. My grief vanished under Delaney’s new tragedy.
I excused myself to the bathroom and threw up.

Three weeks later, her gender reveal invitation arrived.
“You don’t have to go,” Mason said, sipping a beer.
“She’s my sister.”
“She’s been pretty insensitive about everything you’ve been through.”
It was the most he’d acknowledged my feelings in weeks.
“I think I should go. It’ll look weird if I don’t.”
He shrugged. “It’s your call.”
“Will you come with me?”
Something flickered across his face. “I can’t. I’ve got that meeting in Riverside. Remember?”
“On a Saturday?”
“Henderson wants to meet at his lake house. It’s a whole weekend thing.”
I wanted to argue, to beg him to be there, but the words stuck.
“Okay,” I whispered.
The party was extravagant—white and gold balloons, streamers, a dessert table worth more than my monthly salary. A giant box sat in the yard, ready to release pink or blue balloons.
Delaney glowed in a flowing white dress, radiant and everything I was supposed to look like.
“Oakley!” she squealed, rushing to hug me. “You came! I wasn’t sure you would.”
“Of course I came.”
She hugged me, her stomach pressing against mine, cracking something inside me.
“Where’s Mason?” she asked.
“Work thing.”
“On a Saturday? Poor guy works so hard.” Her smile was sympathetic, but her eyes looked almost amused.
I tried to endure the games, the tiny onesies, the squeals of joy. Each laugh felt like a knife.
“You okay?” my cousin Rachel asked.
“I’m fine. Just need some air.”
I slipped to the garden bench, closed my eyes, and tried to breathe.
That’s when I heard them.
“You’re sure she doesn’t suspect anything?” Mason’s voice.
Delaney laughed. “Please. She’s so wrapped up in her misery, she barely notices when you’re in the same room.”
I opened my eyes. Through the rose bushes, I saw them—standing too close. Then Mason kissed her.
Not a friendly peck. Not an accident. A deep, intimate kiss.
My legs moved before my brain caught up. I stumbled through the bushes.
“What the hell is going on?!”
They sprang apart. Mason went pale. Delaney smiled.
“Oakley,” Mason stammered. “This isn’t—”
“Isn’t what? That you weren’t kissing my sister? Because that’s exactly what it looked like!”