The Lab Director Warned Me Not To Face My Brother Alone After The Baby’s DNA Test-Cherry

Caleb Miller’s name pulsed on my phone while Rachel stood across from me with her hand frozen above the DNA report.

Rain tapped the kitchen windows in small hard clicks. The baby monitor hissed on the counter beside an untouched bottle. The yellow clinic envelope lay open between us, its folded edge darkened where rainwater had run off my sleeve.

Rachel did not look at my phone first.

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She looked at the second page of the report.

Possible close biological relationship detected.

The lab director’s voice stayed low in my ear.

“Mr. Miller, is there another adult male in your immediate family?”

My jaw tightened until my teeth ached. Caleb’s name brightened, dimmed, brightened again.

“Yes,” I said.

Rachel’s fingers curled back from the papers as if the ink had burned her.

“Do not confront him alone,” the director said. “And do not destroy anything you received from the clinic, the donor bank, or your personal physician.”

The call ended with a soft beep.

Caleb called again immediately.

His timing had no mercy in it.

Rachel pressed one hand against the edge of the island. Her hospital bracelet slid down her wrist, white plastic against pale skin. The baby whimpered from the bassinet in the living room, a tiny hungry sound that cut through everything.

“Why is he calling?” I asked.

Her mouth opened. Nothing came out.

The phone stopped ringing.

Then a text arrived.

You saw it, didn’t you?

The kitchen smelled like wet denim, cold coffee, and the lavender soap Rachel kept beside the sink. My socks were soaked inside my shoes. The baby monitor crackled again, and Rachel flinched as if the sound had come from behind her.

“Ethan,” she whispered, “I didn’t sleep with him.”

The words landed cleanly, too quickly, like she had rehearsed them in a bathroom mirror.

I picked up the DNA report. My thumb left a wet print on the corner.

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