The entire backyard leaned toward the phone in my hand.
For one second, no one moved. The blue balloons knocked softly against the fence. A plastic fork cracked under someone’s shoe. The frosting on my knee had gone sticky in the heat, and Lina’s fingers were still wrapped around my wrist, squeezing hard enough to leave crescent marks.
No prenatal appointment today. Stop using my clinic name.
The words glowed white against the screen.
My mother blinked at them as if the letters might rearrange themselves into something kinder. My father took one step backward and almost stepped on the cake knife. Daniel was still pinned to the brick wall, his shirt wrinkled under my brothers’ fists, but his face had changed. The panic was gone. What remained was exhaustion.
Lina reached for the phone again.
I stood up.
“Don’t,” I said.
It came out small, but everyone heard it because no one else was breathing loudly enough to cover it.
My sister stared at me. The flower crown had slid almost to her ear. The front of her blue dress sagged where the silicone belly had shifted, leaving an unnatural ridge under the fabric. Once I saw it, I could not unsee it.
“Give me my phone,” she said.
Her voice was calm, almost polished. That scared me more than a scream would have.
My mother finally moved. She reached toward Lina’s stomach, then pulled her hand back before touching it.
“Lina,” she whispered. “Tell me that isn’t what I think it is.”
Lina’s chin lifted.
“You’re all insane.”
Daniel let out one broken laugh against the wall.
My older brother Mark shoved him harder. “You don’t get to laugh after hitting her.”
“I didn’t hit a baby,” Daniel said. “There is no baby.”
The sentence landed like a chair thrown through glass.
Someone near the lemonade table gasped. A cousin covered her mouth. My aunt’s phone stayed raised, still recording, the little red dot glowing near her thumb.
I looked down at Lina’s phone again. Another message banner appeared.
Lina, this is the third time. I never treated you. Remove my clinic from your fundraiser page immediately.
My stomach tightened.
“Fundraiser page?” I asked.
Lina’s eyes flicked toward my mother.
That tiny movement told me where to look.
My mother’s purse sat under the gift table, half-buried beneath pink tissue paper and a fallen bow. I walked to it before anyone could stop me. My mother made a soft sound but did not say no.
Inside was her checkbook, two tissues damp at the corners, and a folded printout.
The top read: Emergency Support For Baby Ella.
Under it were names. Neighbors. Church friends. My father’s bowling league. My mother’s sister in Tampa. Dozens of donations. $25. $100. $500. One anonymous donation for $2,000.
Total raised: $18,600.
My father sat down hard in one of the white chairs. The chair legs scraped against the patio, loud and ugly.
“That was for the specialist,” he said.
Lina’s mouth tightened.
“For the specialist,” he repeated, but this time his voice was thinner.
I scrolled through the phone with my thumb. I expected Lina to lunge at me. She didn’t. She watched me with a stillness I had seen before, years ago, when we were kids and she had broken my mother’s porcelain angel, then waited for me to get blamed.
There were messages from three different women asking about refunds for handmade baby blankets. A thread with someone named Cassie.
Did they buy it?
Lina’s reply: Every one of them. Mom cried over the fake ultrasound again.
My hand went cold around the phone.
Below that was a photo.
Lina in the same blue dress, standing in front of a mirror, lifting the silicone belly away from her body with two fingers. Her face was bored. Not guilty. Not afraid. Bored.
My mother made a noise like she had been punched.
Daniel pushed away from the wall, but my brothers held him there.
“Stop touching him,” I said.
Mark looked at me like I had slapped him.
“He hit her.”
“He exposed her,” I said. My throat scraped around the words. “And he should have done it with his mouth, not his hand. But let him go.”
My brothers released him slowly.
Daniel rubbed his shoulder and bent forward, breathing through his nose. He did not come toward me. He did not ask me to defend him. He simply unlocked his own phone and held it out.
“I was going to show you at home,” he said. “At 2:13, I texted you to keep her away from your parents until I got there. You didn’t answer.”
I remembered the phone buzzing while I tied ribbons around chair backs. I remembered seeing his name and thinking I would call him after the cake.
On his screen was a chain of emails from the costume supplier in Atlanta. Confirmation. Shipping address. A customer-service reply about returning a used silicone belly. Then a bank alert from the account Daniel and I used to help my parents with emergencies.
$4,200 transferred to Lina.
I had approved it two weeks earlier after my mother called crying, saying the baby needed a private test insurance would not cover.
The backyard blurred at the edges.
Not from tears. From math.
$18,600 from my parents’ circle. $4,200 from our account. The stroller. The cake. The clothes. The nursery furniture stacked inside my parents’ den. Every tiny sock folded by hands that thought they were preparing for a granddaughter.
I turned back to Lina.
“Where is the money?”
She laughed once.
It was soft. Almost elegant.
“You’re really going to humiliate me in front of everyone?”
My mother flinched at the word humiliate, like Lina had handed her an easier pain to hold.
I didn’t take it.
“You used a fake clinic name,” I said. “You made a fundraiser. You took money from Mom and Dad. Where is it?”
Lina stood. The fake belly shifted lower, making her dress pull sideways. She clamped one arm across it, but the seam was already visible to everyone.
“You don’t know what I was going through.”
Daniel’s face hardened.
“You were going through a down payment,” he said.
My father looked up.
“What?”
Daniel tapped his screen and turned it outward.
A property listing appeared. A condo in Buckhead. Deposit paid two days earlier. Applicant name: Lina Morales.
My mother shook her head.
“No. She wouldn’t.”
But she was staring at the screen, and the screen did not love Lina enough to lie.
A siren sounded faintly beyond the street.
Someone had called 911 when Daniel struck her. The sound grew louder, threading through the warm afternoon, past the balloons and paper plates and the untouched stack of gifts. Lina heard it too. Her eyes moved to the gate.
That was when she ran.
Not fast. The silicone belly made her awkward, and her sandals slipped on spilled lemonade. She grabbed the side gate latch, but my aunt stepped in front of it. My aunt was sixty-three, five feet tall, and holding a paper plate of smashed cake like a shield.
“No, sweetheart,” she said. “You stay for the officers.”
Lina’s face twisted.
The police arrived through the front walkway with two paramedics behind them. The first officer took in the scene: overturned table, phones raised, Daniel’s torn shirt, Lina’s crooked belly, my mother sitting beside a destroyed cake with both hands pressed to her mouth.
“Who is injured?” the officer asked.
No one answered.
The question seemed too simple for what had happened.
Daniel lifted his hand. “I struck her stomach. I’ll give a statement.”
The officer looked at Lina. “Ma’am, are you pregnant?”
Lina opened her mouth.
I held up the phone.
The officer did not take it from me immediately. He put on gloves first. That small, professional motion made the entire party feel less like a family disaster and more like a record.
“Whose phone is this?”
“Mine,” Lina snapped.
“And you’re giving permission for us to review it?”
“No.”
I handed him Daniel’s phone instead.
“He has receipts, bank alerts, and messages he found legally on our shared account,” I said. “The other phone has messages visible on the lock screen. My aunt has video from the moment after the strike. Several people recorded the text coming in.”
The officer looked at me for the first time.
My voice was steadier than my hands.
“My parents’ money may have been taken under false pretenses. So was ours. We want to file a report.”
Lina stared at me like I had become a stranger in the space between one breath and the next.
“You’re choosing him over me?”
“No,” I said. “I’m choosing the truth over both of you.”
Daniel looked down at the patio.
The paramedic still checked Lina because Daniel had struck her. The officer separated him near the driveway and read him questions in a low voice. Daniel answered every one. He did not ask for sympathy. He did not call himself a hero. When they put him in the back of the cruiser to sort out the assault complaint, he nodded once through the window, as if he had expected it.
That hurt in a different place.
Because he had been right.
And he had still been wrong.
Inside the house, my mother opened Lina’s nursery door with shaking fingers.
The room smelled like fresh paint and baby detergent. A white crib stood by the window. Tiny yellow onesies hung from satin hangers. A plush rabbit sat in the rocking chair with a ribbon around its neck.
My father picked it up, held it for three seconds, then set it down carefully, like it was alive.
In the closet, behind a stack of diaper boxes, we found three shopping bags from designer stores and a folder with condo paperwork. The receipt totals matched almost exactly what had disappeared.
My mother sank onto the nursery rug.
Not dramatically. Not with a sob.
Her knees just stopped working.
I sat beside her and put the folder in my lap.
From the backyard, Lina’s voice rose sharp and controlled, telling the officer we were jealous, unstable, cruel. Then my aunt’s voice cut through.
“I have the video from Easter too.”
I stood.
At Easter, Lina had made my mother kneel beside her chair to feel the baby kick. My mother had cried into Lina’s dress while Lina looked straight at my aunt’s camera and smiled.
My aunt sent the video to the officer.
By 6:22 p.m., the balloons were sagging. Guests had left in clusters, whispering by the curb. The cake topper lay in a plastic evidence bag. So did the printed fundraiser page, Daniel’s receipts, and the condo folder.
Daniel was cited and released pending review. Lina was not handcuffed in front of the neighbors, which made my mother exhale with relief she did not want to admit. But the officer gave her a case number and told my parents the fraud unit would contact them.
Lina stood at the driveway edge with no flower crown now, just flattened hair and red marks at her temples.
“You’ll regret this,” she told me.
I looked at the silicone belly in the clear bag on the hood of the patrol car.
“I already do.”
Two weeks later, my parents received the first refund check from the condo escrow account after their attorney filed a claim. It was not everything. It was enough to make my father stop staring at the nursery door every morning.
Daniel and I sat across from each other at our kitchen table the night after his court date. His assault charge was reduced after the videos, the fake belly, and the fraud evidence were reviewed, but the judge still told him the same thing I had not been able to stop hearing in my own head.
“You don’t get to use violence because you found the truth.”
Daniel accepted it without blinking.
“I know,” he said.
There was a bruise on his wrist from where my brother had pinned him. There was no victory in his face.
I slid my wedding ring in circles on the table, listening to the dishwasher hum and the clock tick above the stove.
“I don’t know what we are after this,” I said.
He nodded.
“I know.”
That was the only honest answer he could have given.
Lina left town before the fraud interview and stayed with a friend in Savannah until the warrant made that impossible. My parents did not visit her the first week. My mother mailed one package: Lina’s childhood photo albums, the flower crown from the shower, and a note with only six words.
Return what you took from us.
Not love.
Not forgiveness.
Just the money, the lie, the room painted for a baby who had never existed.
On the last Saturday of the month, I went back to my parents’ house. The backyard had been cleaned. The white chairs were gone. A square of frosting still clung between two patio stones, hardened by the sun.
My father was in the nursery with a cardboard box.
He handed me the plush rabbit.
“Donate it,” he said.
My mother stood in the doorway behind him, holding the case report in one hand and the refund receipt in the other. Her face looked smaller than it had before the baby shower, but her eyes were dry.
Outside, the wind moved the empty balloon string still tied to the fence.
It tapped the wood once.
Then again.
My mother reached past me, closed the nursery door, and turned the little brass key until the lock clicked.