He Toasted My Sister’s Baby, Not Knowing He Already Had a Grandchild-habe

Dad raised his glass to celebrate my sister’s baby, then turned toward me and asked, “So… when’s your turn?”

The champagne was still catching the summer light when I looked at him and said, “Seven months ago.”

At first, he smiled like he thought I was making some tired joke.

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Then my hand moved toward my purse, my sister Madison stopped breathing normally, and every person under that white rental tent seemed to feel the air change at once.

My daughter was asleep against my shoulder in a lace-trimmed dress, warm and heavy in the way babies are when they trust the arms holding them.

Her curls were damp at the edges from the heat.

Her tiny fist held a fold of my dress like she already knew I needed something to keep me standing.

She was seven months old.

She was my father’s first granddaughter.

And until that afternoon, he had never held her, never kissed her forehead, never sent a toy, never called to ask what her middle name was, and never once asked why I had stopped sending pictures.

My name is Olivia Ortiz.

I am thirty-two years old, married to a man named Carlos, and I have spent most of my adult life being the dependable daughter no one has to worry about because worrying about me would require noticing me.

I work in corporate operations, which sounds more important than it feels.

Most days, it means answering emails before I have finished my first cup of coffee, fixing problems other people created, moving meetings, calming down managers, and coming home with my brain still making lists while my baby needs a bottle and the laundry needs to be switched.

I know what it means to count diapers before payday.

I know what it means to sit in the driveway for three quiet minutes before walking inside because once you open the front door, everyone needs something from you.

I also know what it means to be called “the strong one” by people who only like your strength when it saves them from guilt.

In my family, Madison was the delicate one.

Madison was the exciting one.

Madison was the one my father watched when she walked into a room.

She was five years younger than me, pretty in a way that made strangers forgive her before she even spoke, and skilled at making her wants sound like emergencies.

Nobody ever said she mattered more.

That would have been too honest.

Instead, it came in polished little moments that could always be explained away if I dared to point at them.

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