They Blamed Sarah for No Heir, Until Page Eleven Revealed Nathan’s Secret in Front of Everyone-iwachan

The paper inside Rachel’s envelope made a soft rasp as it slid against the leather folder.

Nobody moved for it now.

The room smelled of candle wax, chilled oysters, and expensive perfume. Outside, another firework burst over the harbor at 10:04 p.m., bright enough to paint Lawrence Foster’s face silver for one second. His mouth had tightened into a hard line. Evelyn’s fingers curled around the stem of her wineglass until the crystal gave a tiny, dangerous squeak.

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Nathan’s chair scraped back half an inch.

Rachel did not blink.

“Sit down,” she said.

Nathan sat.

Two years earlier, that would have shocked me. Nathan Foster was not a man people ordered around in his family’s private rooms. He was the only son of Foster Maritime, the soft-spoken heir who had been taught to smile while other people opened doors.

When we first met, I thought his quietness was kindness.

He came into the nonprofit office where I worked after Hurricane Ian relief drives, wearing rolled-up sleeves and carrying boxes of bottled water himself. He asked every volunteer’s name. He remembered mine. He sent a $25,000 donation three days later and wrote a note in blue ink: Sarah, you made chaos look organized.

I kept that note in my nightstand for months.

On our first real date, he took me to a seafood place with paper napkins instead of white tablecloths because I said fancy restaurants made me nervous. He laughed when I got cocktail sauce on my sleeve. He walked me to my car without touching me until I offered my hand.

That was the version of Nathan I married.

At our wedding, Lawrence gave a toast about legacy. Evelyn kissed my cheek and whispered, “Now we just need the nursery.” I thought it was awkward. I did not know it was a warning.

The first year, Nathan came with me to appointments twice.

Only twice.

After that, work emergencies always appeared. Port contracts. Insurance meetings. Calls with Savannah. I sat alone in clinic rooms while nurses asked whether my husband had completed his side of the testing.

“He’s busy,” I would say.

The paper blanket under me always crackled when I shifted. Fluorescent lights made everything look too clean. My hands smelled like sanitizer for hours afterward. Each month, I walked out with another prescription, another calendar, another instruction to relax, as if relaxation could grow a child on command.

Nathan would bring flowers home.

Peonies. Tulips. White roses.

“I hate that you’re going through this,” he would say.

I heard love.

Now I heard distance.

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