The Baby Shower Toast That Turned A Family’s Cruelty Into Proof-lbsuong

By late October, Boston had begun to smell like wet leaves, chimney smoke, and expensive coffee.

From the third-floor window of my studio in Beacon Hill, I could see Charles Street shining under a thin gray rain, the yellow cabs moving slowly between brick buildings that looked softened by weather and age.

My name is Elizabeth Harrison, and I design rooms for other people’s milestones.

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Nurseries, libraries, dining rooms, entryways where families want guests to feel wealth before they feel welcome.

That morning, I had a nursery sketch open beneath the warm brass glow of my drafting lamp.

Sage green walls.

White oak shelves.

A hand-painted mural of rabbits sleeping beneath moonlit ferns.

It was supposed to be for a client in Back Bay, but my hand stopped halfway through the crescent moon because my mind had gone somewhere it had no business going.

To another nursery.

The one I had drawn for myself before the appointment at Massachusetts General, before the ultrasound tech grew too quiet, before Daniel stopped asking questions because the doctor’s face had already answered them.

That nursery had pale blue curtains, a walnut rocking chair, and a mobile of paper stars ordered from a woman in Vermont.

The box was still unopened in our hall closet.

Every time I passed it, I told myself I would move it tomorrow.

Grief has its own furniture, and sometimes you learn to walk around it.

My assistant, Kate, appeared in the doorway with her tablet tucked against her chest.

She was twenty-six, sharp, kind, and blessed with the rare instinct to stop speaking when a room had clearly become dangerous.

“Elizabeth?” she said. “The contractor from the Tremont brownstone is on line two. He says the fireplace tiles arrived cracked.”

I shut the sketchbook too quickly.

The paper made a small sound, almost like a slap.

“Tell him I’ll call back in five.”

Kate glanced at the drawing, then at my face, then nodded once.

She did not ask about the rabbits.

She did not ask about the paper stars.

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