DNA Results Said His Son Wasn’t His—Then A Stranger Walked In-ngyen

My husband had called me earlier that afternoon and told me to come home for dinner at his mother’s house.

“Come tonight,” Ryan said, his voice flat in a way I should have noticed. “Mum is putting together a family dinner.”

I remember asking whether I needed to bring anything.

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He said no.

That was all.

No warmth.

No little joke about Patricia overcooking the vegetables.

No reminder that Noah would throw peas on the floor if no one watched him.

Just come tonight.

By the time I reached Patricia Bennett’s house, rain had polished the pavement and turned the front step slick under my shoes.

Noah was heavy on my hip, sleepy and soft, his cheek still sticky from the strawberry yoghurt he had eaten at our own kitchen counter before we left.

I could see light through the front windows.

Too many silhouettes.

Too still.

The moment I stepped inside, I knew the dinner was not a dinner.

Every relative was already seated in the living room.

Patricia sat straight-backed in her best chair, the one angled towards the doorway as if she had expected to preside over something.

Melissa stood by the mantelpiece, arms folded.

Ryan’s uncle had a mug in both hands but had not drunk from it.

Two cousins sat on the sofa with their knees together, staring at the carpet.

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