At My Baby Shower, A White Gift Box Exposed My Husband In Front Of Everyone-hihehu

The backyard smelled like peonies, vanilla cake, and a lie expensive enough to fool everyone but me.

The white tents had been set up that morning before the grass fully dried, and the workers had moved quietly around the yard while I stood near the back door with one hand on my stomach and the other wrapped around a mug of tea I had barely touched.

By noon, the tables were dressed in soft linen, the cake was centered beneath the tent, and little folded cards marked where guests could leave advice for the baby.

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A small American flag my mother-in-law had pushed into a porch planter fluttered every time the breeze came through, bright and ordinary against all that polished white.

It looked like the kind of baby shower people posted online to prove their life had turned out exactly right.

Mine had not.

I was seven months pregnant, smiling in a pale blue dress that made every woman at the party say the same thing.

You are glowing.

I thanked them because that was easier than explaining that a pregnant woman can smile with a whole marriage dead inside her.

Matthew loved the performance.

He moved through the backyard like he owned not just the house, but the air around it, stopping beside investors, cousins, neighbors, and family friends with that warm, practiced grin that had once made me think he was safe.

Every few minutes, he drifted back to me.

He would place one hand gently on my lower back, or slide his palm over my stomach for the room to see, and people would soften at the sight of him.

To them, he looked like the proud husband.

To me, he looked like a man touching what he had already betrayed.

Vanessa Blake arrived twenty minutes after the first round of lemonade had been poured.

She wore cream, of course.

Not white, not exactly, but close enough to be noticed by anyone paying attention and soft enough to pretend it was innocent.

Her blonde hair had that smooth, careful look some women wear when they want the room to think nothing about them is accidental.

She hugged my mother-in-law first.

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