I walked into the house still holding my daughter’s ultrasound photo when I heard something fall onto the bedroom floor upstairs.
When I opened the door, my husband stood shirtless beside our unmade bed, hurriedly pulling up his pants.
“You’re home early,” Damon said.
He snatched a white shirt from the floor.
“I spilled coffee. I was changing.”
There was no coffee stain on it.
But beneath the bench at the end of our bed lay a champagne-colored lace camisole with a tiny blue charm attached to one strap.
I had seen it before.
Claire had shown it to me after her engagement dinner, laughing as she held it against her body.
“Owen paid a ridiculous amount for this,” she had said. “I’m saving it for our honeymoon.”
Claire had been my closest friend for twelve years.
She was also hiding behind my maternity coats.
The closet door stood open less than an inch, but that was enough. I saw a hand clutching the sleeve of my cream coat. I recognized the diamond Owen had placed on Claire’s finger. I smelled the perfume she had worn to our baby shower planning lunch two days earlier.
Neither of them realized I had seen her.
Damon moved between me and the closet.
“How did the appointment go?”
I stared at him with his belt still undone, his hair disheveled, and the bedsheet dragged halfway off the mattress.
Then I looked at the ultrasound image in my hand.
Our daughter had turned toward the monitor that morning. For the first time, I had been able to see the shape of her nose.
Damon had claimed he was too busy to attend.
Now I understood what had kept him home.
“Is she healthy?” he asked.
Behind the maternity coats, Claire remained perfectly still.
“She’s healthy,” I said.
My voice trembled, but Damon smiled as though he assumed I was overwhelmed by the appointment.
I moved one step closer to the closet.
Every instinct in me wanted to yank the door open.
I wanted Claire to face me. I wanted Damon to explain why my best friend’s lingerie was lying under our bed while I had attended a prenatal appointment alone.
Then I noticed Damon’s phone on the mattress.
Claire had hers with her inside the closet.
If I confronted them now, they would erase their messages, call everything a misunderstanding, and coordinate their version of events before I could even contact Owen.
My only advantage was that they believed I knew nothing.
I rested one hand over my stomach.
“I feel light-headed,” I said. “Could you get me some water?”
Relief passed across Damon’s face.
“Of course.”
He turned toward the bathroom.
Keeping my phone beside my hip, I quietly took one photograph.
The camisole was visible beneath the bench. Damon’s shirt lay crumpled next to it. The corner of our disturbed bed appeared in the background.
I touched nothing.
“I’m going to sit in the nursery,” I said.
“That’s a good idea,” Damon replied too quickly.
I left without glancing toward the closet again.
Inside the nursery, I lowered myself into the chair beside the unfinished crib. My hands shook so badly that the ultrasound photo kept tapping against the wooden armrest.
A minute later, I heard the bedroom door close.
Quiet footsteps crossed the hallway.
Then the side door opened and shut.
When I went back upstairs, the camisole had disappeared. The bed had been straightened, and Damon’s shirt was no longer on the floor.
He was downstairs running water in the kitchen as though nothing had happened.
They believed they had removed every piece of evidence.
They knew nothing about the photograph.
They assumed my silence meant they were safe.
I locked the nursery door and opened the security application on my phone.
Claire had an emergency entry code. I had given it to her because I trusted her enough to enter my home whenever I might need help.
The access history appeared.
Her code had unlocked my front door six times over the previous three months.
Every visit matched a prenatal appointment Damon had insisted I attend alone.
The first entry had occurred three days after Claire cried in my arms and agreed to become my daughter’s godmother.
Part 2:
The access history was not the only evidence waiting for me.
A banking notification showed that $18,500 had been transferred from the account Damon and I had created for hospital costs and my maternity leave.
The recipient was Riverton Heights Residential.
An apartment complex.
I saved the bank record, emailed the photograph and security log to myself, and contacted a family lawyer before Damon returned with the water.
I did not confront him.
Claire texted me later that evening.
How did the ultrasound go? I can’t wait to meet my goddaughter.
I answered:
She’s healthy. The shower should happen exactly as planned.
Four days later, Claire stood beneath pink balloons in my living room, holding a glass beside her fiancé.
Damon placed one hand on my shoulder.
“Felicity isn’t just my best friend,” Claire told our families. “She’s the sister I chose.”
I pulled a photograph from the envelope hidden under my chair and placed it beside my daughter’s ultrasound image.
In the picture, the champagne lace camisole rested beneath the bench in my bedroom, beside Damon’s shirt and our unmade bed.
Claire’s smile disappeared.
Damon said, “That could belong to anyone.”
Owen moved closer.
His gaze fixed on the small blue charm attached to one strap.
Then he looked at Claire’s engagement ring.
“No,” he said quietly. “That doesn’t belong to anyone.”
His expression shifted.
“I bought that for Claire.”
The words seemed to drain every sound from the room.
“I bought that for Claire.”
PART 3
Claire’s glass shook in her hand. Damon’s fingers tightened briefly against my shoulder before he withdrew them.
For a moment, no one moved.
Then Owen turned toward Claire.
“Why was it in Felicity’s bedroom?”
Claire opened her mouth, but Damon spoke first.
“Claire has been helping with the shower. She’s been in and out of the house for weeks.”
He gave a short, offended-sounding laugh.
“A piece of clothing fell out of a bag. That’s all this is.”
Claire nodded far too quickly.
“Yes. I brought several things over. Decorations, gifts, clothes for the weekend. I must have dropped it.”
Owen continued staring at the photograph.
“Under their bed?”
“It was under the bench,” Damon snapped. “Don’t make it sound worse than it was.”
My daughter shifted beneath my palm.
Damon faced me and lowered his voice, presenting himself as the reasonable one.
“Felicity, you’ve been exhausted. Claire has done more for this shower than anyone. Don’t turn her kindness into something ugly.”
There it was.
Their first argument was not that my conclusion was wrong.
It was that I was being ungrateful.
I removed another sheet from the envelope.
“The photograph was taken at ten forty-two Tuesday morning,” I said. “The same morning Claire told Owen she was meeting a wedding vendor.”
Claire’s expression tightened.