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A year after she stole my husband, my former best friend mailed me an invitation to her baby shower. “Come celebrate our little miracle,” she wrote, adding a smiley face. “Sorry you couldn’t give him a son.”

articleUseronMay 25, 2026

A year after stealing my husband, my former best friend mailed me an invitation to her baby shower. “Come celebrate our little miracle,” she wrote with a cheerful smiley face beneath it. “Sorry you couldn’t give him a son.” I froze in my kitchen, staring at the open envelope from the DNA clinic lying beside it on the counter. The lab results clearly confirmed my ex-husband had been completely sterile since birth. Then my eyes drifted to the positive paternity test belonging to his younger brother, and a soft laugh escaped my lips. “I’ll be there,” I whispered into the empty room. She has absolutely no idea what gift I’m bringing. And when she opens it in front of everyone… her perfect little fairytale will go up in flames.

The invitation arrived inside a cream-colored envelope heavy with perfume and malice. My former best friend had written my name across the front in the same elegant looping handwriting she once used on birthday cards, apology notes, and even the guest list for my wedding.

Rain scratched softly against the kitchen windows while I stared at the gold lettering.

Come celebrate our little miracle.

Below it, in pink ink, she had added: Sorry you couldn’t give him a son. 🙂

For a moment, the room spun slightly around me.

Then my gaze shifted toward the second envelope already opened on the counter. White. Plain. Clinical.

The DNA clinic logo sat at the top like a sentence being handed down.

For six years, my ex-husband Daniel had convinced me I was the broken one. Six years of hormone injections, fertility specialists, invasive tests, tears, and his disappointed sighs every time another result came back negative. Six years of my best friend Camille holding my hand while secretly holding him too.

When I finally discovered them together, she cried beautifully into his shirt and whispered, “It just happened.”

Daniel looked me in the eyes and said, “She makes me feel like a man.”

Three months later, they announced their engagement.

Now Camille was pregnant.

Everyone called it fate.

I reread the lab report even though I already knew every word by memory. Daniel Mercer: congenital azoospermia. Sterile since birth. Not reduced fertility. Not damaged fertility. Impossible fertility.

Stapled behind it sat the second report.

Alistair Mercer: 99.99% probability of paternity.

Daniel’s younger brother.

A quiet laugh slipped out of me, barely louder than the rain outside.

For an entire year, Camille had flaunted her victory online. Her hand resting possessively on Daniel’s chest. Her diamond ring sparkling above my old dining table. Her captions dripping with smug cruelty: Some women lose because they were never meant to keep what they had.

She wanted an audience for my humiliation.

Fine.

I picked up my phone and called my lawyer.

“Naomi?” Evelyn answered immediately. “Tell me you’re not staring at that invitation alone.”

“I’m staring at evidence,” I replied calmly.

A brief pause followed. Then her tone sharpened. “Good.”

“I need certified copies of everything. Fertility records, paternity reports, the financial audit.”

“They’re already prepared.”

“And the house?”

“Still protected by your settlement clause. If Daniel committed fraud during the divorce, we can reopen the case.”

I looked down at the baby shower invitation and smiled faintly.

Camille thought I was the devastated barren ex-wife crawling back to watch her stolen fairytale blossom.

What she forgot was this:

Before Daniel married me, before Camille learned how expensive betrayal could become, I built the legal firm responsible for Mercer Holdings’ contracts.

I knew exactly where every body was buried.

And now, one of them was growing inside Camille’s stomach.

“I’ll be there,” I whispered softly.

Then I ordered the gift….

PART 2

The baby shower took place at the Mercer estate, because Camille abandoned subtlety the moment she discovered inherited wealth. White roses lined the driveway. Pale blue balloons curved over the marble staircase. A violinist stood beside the fountain, playing something delicate that sounded suspiciously like a funeral hymn.

I arrived wearing black.

Camille spotted me before anyone else.

Her smile widened sharply, almost like a blade.

“Naomi,” she sang sweetly while crossing the ballroom with one hand resting dramatically on her stomach. “You actually came.”

“I told you I would.”

Daniel stood beside her in a pale linen suit, his hand spread proudly across her belly. He looked polished, smug, and painfully foolish—the kind of man who mistakes silence for surrender.

“You look well,” he said carefully.

“You look fertile,” I answered.

His smile twitched slightly.

Camille laughed too loudly. “Still bitter? Oh, sweetheart, don’t be. Life gives different women different blessings.”

Around us, guests pretended not to listen. Daniel’s parents sat beside the fireplace, his mother glittering in diamonds while his father watched me carefully like a man who remembered exactly how much I knew about his business dealings.

Camille leaned closer toward me. “I hope this isn’t too painful for you. Watching Daniel finally become a father.”

I looked calmly at her stomach.

“I imagine this situation is painful for several people.”

Her eyes narrowed slightly, but someone called for games, and she drifted away again like a queen wrapped in stolen luxury and borrowed bloodlines.

I placed my gift onto the table.

A blue box tied with silver ribbon.

No card.

For the next hour, I watched them perform their little fantasy.

Daniel kissed Camille’s temple every time cameras appeared nearby. Camille told guests their baby was “a Mercer miracle.” Across the room, Alistair stood near the bar looking pale and sweating through his collar. Every time Camille laughed, his eyes flickered nervously toward Daniel, then toward me.

There was my answer.

He knew that I knew.

After the cake cutting, he followed me quietly into the hallway.

“Naomi,” he whispered. “Please.”

I turned slowly. “Please what?”

His face crumpled immediately. Alistair had always been softer than Daniel, though softness was not the same thing as innocence.

“It only happened once.”

“Then you’re an incredibly efficient brother.”

He flinched visibly.

“She told me Daniel knew,” he said desperately. “She said they had an arrangement. She said he couldn’t… she said they needed help.”

“And you believed her?”

“I wanted to.” His voice cracked painfully. “She told me she loved me.”

For one brief second, I almost felt sorry for him.

Almost.

“Did Daniel know?” I asked.

Alistair looked toward the ballroom where Daniel accepted congratulations like royalty.

“No.”

There it was.

Not destiny. Not an agreement. Just another betrayal built entirely on vanity.

I opened my clutch purse and handed Alistair a folded document.

His eyes scanned the page. The color drained from his face immediately.

“What is this?”

“A notice. Your father has been funneling company money into Daniel’s lifestyle while hiding it beneath consulting fees. Daniel signed false financial disclosures during our divorce. Camille helped move assets through her boutique account.”

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