Jason’s voice didn’t sound like the man I married.
It sounded like someone who had been carrying something heavy for too long.
The backyard felt smaller suddenly.
Like all the air had been sucked out.
Emily was still on the ground, curled up, arms wrapped tight around herself—but not like she was protecting a baby.
Like she was protecting a secret.
I could still feel it on my fingertips.
Foam.
Straps.
Velcro.
I pulled my hand back slowly, like touching her had burned me.
“Say something,” my mom whispered, her voice cracking as she stood frozen near the table of fallen cupcakes.
No one moved.
My dad’s grip on Jason loosened just enough for him to breathe.
“What do you mean?” I asked.
My voice didn’t sound like mine either.
Jason swallowed hard.
He didn’t look at me.
He looked at Emily.
“I followed her yesterday,” he said.
A ripple moved through the crowd.
Not loud.
Just enough to shift the weight of what was happening.
Emily’s eyes flicked toward him.
Sharp.
Warning.
“Don’t,” she said.
It wasn’t fear.
It was control slipping.
Jason ignored her.
“She’s been going to St. Mary’s Hospital all week. Different entrances. Different times.”
The name hit me harder than it should have.
That’s where my friend had her baby last month.
That’s where half the town goes.
“Why?” my brother asked, still holding Jason’s arm but no longer sure why.
Jason finally reached into his pocket.
His phone was already unlocked.
Like he’d been waiting for this exact moment.
He turned the screen toward me.
“I didn’t want to believe it,” he said quietly.
The video started playing.
Grainy. Zoomed in.
Emily.
Wearing a hoodie, not the dress.
Standing near the maternity wing doors.
Watching.
Not like a visitor.
Like someone studying patterns.
The timestamp was from the night before.
“You recorded her?” I whispered.
“I thought she was meeting someone,” he said. “I thought maybe… I don’t know… something normal.”
Normal.
That word felt almost offensive now.
The video shifted.
Another clip.
Emily again.
This time sitting in her car in the hospital parking lot.
Writing something down in a small notebook.
Zoom in.
License plates.
Room numbers scribbled across a page.
My stomach turned.
“She’s tracking families,” Jason said.
“No,” I said immediately.
Too quickly.
Too desperately.
But I couldn’t stop shaking.
Emily let out a slow breath.
And then—she laughed.
It wasn’t loud.
But it cut through everything.
“You really went all detective, huh?” she said, sitting up slowly.
No one helped her.
No one moved toward her anymore.
The shift had already happened.
“You ruined everything,” she added.
Not crying.
Not denying.
Just… angry.
“At least now they know,” Jason shot back.
Emily rolled her eyes.
“They don’t know anything.”
She looked at me then.
Really looked at me.
Like she was deciding something.
“You think I’m crazy?” she asked.
I couldn’t answer.
Because I didn’t know anymore.
“I’ve been trying for three years,” she said, her voice tightening for the first time. “Three. Years.”
There it was.
The crack.
The piece that made everything hurt instead of just confuse.
“I’ve watched everyone else get what I can’t,” she continued. “You, your friends, random people online. All of you.”
Her hands shook slightly as she pushed herself to her feet.
The fake belly shifted awkwardly under the fabric.
No one offered to fix it.
No one pretended anymore.
“And you think that gives you the right to take someone else’s baby?” my mom said, her voice low but firm.
Emily didn’t answer right away.
That silence was louder than anything she could have said.
Jason stepped forward.
“You had a plan,” he said. “Tomorrow. You were going to pretend to be discharged. You had the paperwork ready.”
My head snapped toward him.
“What paperwork?”
He turned the phone again.
Photos this time.
Forms.
Hospital discharge templates.
Forged signatures.
A fake ID.
With Emily’s picture.
But a different name.
My legs felt weak.
“This isn’t just desperation,” I said.
“This is…”
I couldn’t finish.
Emily’s jaw tightened.
“You have no idea what it feels like,” she snapped.
“No,” I said. “But I know this isn’t it.”
Sirens in the distance.
Faint.
But getting closer.
Someone must have actually stayed on the phone with 911.
The sound changed everything again.
Reality closing in.
Emily heard it too.
Her eyes flicked toward the street beyond the fence.
Calculating.
Always calculating.
“Tell them it’s a misunderstanding,” she said suddenly.
To me.
Not to Jason.
Not to anyone else.
To me.
Like I was still on her side.
Like I hadn’t just felt the truth with my own hands.
I stared at her.
This girl I grew up with.
Shared a bedroom with.
Fought over clothes with.
Cried with.
Protected.
And something inside me… shifted.
“I can’t,” I said.
Her face changed instantly.
Not heartbreak.
Not regret.
Cold.
“You’re choosing him?” she asked.
“I’m choosing what’s right,” I said, though my voice trembled.
The sirens were louder now.
Neighbors had started stepping back.
Creating space.
Like the scene had already been handed over to someone else.
Emily laughed again.
But this time it sounded hollow.
“You think this ends here?” she said quietly.
I didn’t answer.
Because I didn’t know.
Police lights flashed across the backyard fence.
Red and blue cutting through pastel decorations and fallen wrapping paper.
The music had finally stopped.
No one had touched the speaker.
It just… ended.
An officer stepped through the open gate.
Then another.
They took in the scene.
The people.
Emily.
Jason.
Me.
“What happened here?” one of them asked.
No one spoke right away.
Because the truth didn’t sound real out loud.
Jason looked at me.
Not asking.
Just… steady.
I took a breath.
And stepped forward.
But before I could say a word—
Emily said something that made everything even worse.
Something none of us were ready to hear.
And suddenly… this wasn’t just about one baby anymore.
It never was.