The red light on my father’s camera kept blinking from the grass.
Nobody moved toward it at first.
The camera lay half buried in a smear of blue frosting, its strap twisted around a crushed paper cup, still aimed at Lina’s chair. The speaker near the fence clicked through the end of the lullaby and started the same soft tune again. Somewhere behind me, a balloon popped against the wooden gate with a flat little snap.
Lina’s fingers stayed locked over the beige zipper under her dress.
My mother’s hand covered her mouth so tightly her knuckles turned white.
Daniel was still pinned against the fence by my brothers, one sleeve torn at the shoulder, his phone hanging loose from his hand. His face did not look victorious. It looked emptied out.
“Ask her,” he said again.
His voice was hoarse, but not loud.
“Ask her where the real ultrasound is.”
My mother turned slowly toward Lina.
For eight months, Mom had kept a printed ultrasound photo in the front pocket of her purse. She showed it to grocery clerks, church friends, her dentist, the woman who cut her hair. She had traced the tiny white curve in the image with one finger and whispered, “That’s my grandbaby.”
Now her purse sat on the gift table, frosting on the clasp.
“Lina,” Mom said. “Where is it?”
Lina tried to sit up.
The fake belly shifted under her dress.
It made a small rubbery sound against the fabric, and every person close enough to hear it stepped back at once. Not dramatically. Not with shouting. Just one quiet shuffle of shoes on grass, like the whole backyard had lost trust in the ground.
“Mom,” Lina said, “he attacked me.”
Her voice shook, but her eyes moved everywhere except my mother’s face.
Daniel lifted his phone again.
My oldest brother, Marcus, grabbed his wrist.
“Do not move,” Marcus snapped.
Daniel did not pull away.
“Then you hold it,” he said.
He let the phone drop into Marcus’s hand.
The screen was still open.
Marcus looked down, ready to hate him harder. His jaw worked once. Then twice. The anger drained from his face in a way I had never seen before.
“What is this?” he whispered.
My younger brother, Aaron, leaned over his shoulder. His mouth opened, but no sound came out.
Mom reached for the phone.
Marcus didn’t give it to her right away.
That scared me more than the receipt.
“Marcus,” she said.
He swallowed and handed it over.
The phone trembled in her hand. The vendor receipt filled the screen. Then the text thread. Then the photo Daniel had saved from Lina’s cloud account, a picture of the same blue dress hanging on a bedroom door with the silicone belly propped underneath it like a costume piece waiting for a stage.
Mom’s lips moved around the words without speaking them.
Rush shipping.
Third trimester.
$312.80.
Delivery to Lina’s apartment.
The air smelled like sugar, cut grass, and panic sweat.
“Those are fake,” Lina said.
She reached toward the phone.
Mom pulled it back.
Lina’s face changed.
Not into fear.
Into anger.
“You’re really going to stand there and blame me after he hit me?” she said.
Daniel closed his eyes.
My father finally bent down and picked up the camera.
He wiped frosting from the lens with the edge of his shirt. His hands were shaking so badly he had to hold it with both palms.
“Dad,” I said.
He did not answer.
He pressed one button.
The little screen lit up.
At first, there was only the tilted view from the grass: table legs, ribbon, Lina’s blue dress, my mother’s white shoes. Then the audio came through, thin and sharp.
Daniel shouting.
Lina screaming.
My mother crying out.
Then another sound.
A tiny plastic click.
My father replayed the last ten seconds.
There it was again.
Click.
The zipper pull striking the chair leg when Lina twisted on the ground.
My mother took one step backward.
“Show me,” she said.
Lina stared at her.
“No.”
“Show me your stomach.”
The backyard went so quiet I could hear the ice shifting inside a glass pitcher on the drinks table.
Lina’s lower lip trembled. Her flower crown had slipped sideways. Blue frosting streaked one elbow. She looked suddenly smaller without everyone protecting her.
“You don’t get to talk to me like that,” she said.
Mom’s voice dropped.
“I sold my mother’s bracelet for that nursery set.”
Lina’s eyes flicked toward the pile of gifts.
The stroller was still boxed. The crib mattress leaned against the fence. The expensive white bassinet with brass wheels sat under the oak tree, a gold bow tied around the handle.
Daniel’s phone buzzed in Marcus’s hand.
Marcus looked at the notification.
His face tightened.
“It’s the bank,” he said.
Mom turned.
“What bank?”
Daniel opened his eyes.
“I called them before I came,” he said. “Your transfer was scheduled for three fifteen.”
My mother’s head jerked toward the kitchen window.
Her laptop was inside on the counter.
The $18,400 party was not the end of it.
It had only been the stage.
At 3:15 p.m., Mom was supposed to send Lina another $26,000 for a deposit on a bigger apartment, the one Lina said she needed because the baby’s father had disappeared.
Mom had shown me the transfer page two nights earlier. She had laughed softly and said, “Your sister won’t ask, so I have to help before she gets desperate.”
Lina had asked.
She had just learned to do it without sounding like a request.
“Daniel,” I said, my mouth dry, “how did you know?”
He looked at me for the first time since he entered the yard.
“I didn’t know at first.”
His throat moved.
“I heard her in the garage last week.”
Lina’s face hardened.
Daniel kept going.
“She was on speaker with someone named Bree. She said, ‘After the shower, Mom won’t be able to back out. I’ll cry, say the stress caused it, and nobody will ask for medical records.’”
Lina pushed herself to her feet.
The fake belly sagged slightly to one side.
My mother saw it.
The sound that came out of her was not loud. It was worse than loud.
It was a breath with all the air removed.
“Unzip it,” Mom said.
Lina shook her head.
“No.”
Marcus stepped away from Daniel.
Aaron did too.
Daniel stayed against the fence as if he still deserved to be held there.
I stood between him and Lina, my palms sticky with frosting, the smell of vanilla turning sour in my throat.
“Lina,” I said, “take it off.”
She looked at me then.
For a second, I saw the sister who used to steal my sweaters and sleep in my bed when storms scared her. Then that face vanished.
“You always choose men over me,” she said.
The sentence landed in the grass between us, old and practiced.
I almost stepped toward her out of habit.
Then my father’s camera beeped.
He had found another clip.
He turned the screen toward us.
It was from earlier that day, before the guests arrived. The camera must have been recording while Dad tested the angle from the patio table.
Lina stood near the gift table alone, her back half turned.
The blue dress was lifted slightly at the side.
She was adjusting the zipper.
Then she looked around, checked the gate, and tucked a folded envelope behind the bassinet ribbon.
My father walked to the bassinet.
Lina lunged.
Aaron caught her by the arm before she reached it.
“Let go of me!” she snapped.
Dad untied the gold bow.
The envelope slid free.
It was thick.
No name on it.
He opened it with his thumb.
Inside were printed discharge instructions from a clinic in Nevada, three fake ultrasound images still attached to a watermark template, and a handwritten list.
Mom — apartment deposit $26k.
Dad — car seat fund $4k.
Aunt Carol — emergency medical bill $7.5k.
Church group — meal train cash only.
At the bottom, in Lina’s slanted handwriting:
Loss story by June 3. No funeral. Too painful.
My aunt Carol sat down hard in one of the white chairs.
The chair scraped over the patio stone.
Nobody helped her right away.
Everyone was staring at that line.
No funeral.
Too painful.
My mother reached for the paper, but her fingers stopped just above it.
She did not touch it.
“Was there ever a baby?” she asked.
Lina’s eyes filled.
She was good at that. Fast tears. Wet lashes. A soft wobble in the chin.
But this time nobody moved to comfort her.
“Mom, please,” she said.
“Was there ever a baby?”
A siren sounded somewhere beyond the neighborhood, faint at first, then passing away toward the main road.
Lina looked at the gate.
Then at the phones in people’s hands.
Then at Daniel.
“You ruined everything,” she said.
Daniel’s shoulders dropped.
“No,” he said. “You did.”
At 3:12 p.m., my mother walked into the house.
She did not run.
She did not cry.
Her steps were slow and stiff, like every bone had to be told what to do.
Through the kitchen window, I watched her open the laptop. She wiped her fingers on a dish towel before touching the keys. She clicked once. Then again.
The scheduled transfer disappeared from the screen.
Lina saw it happen.
The fight left her face.
That was the first time she looked afraid.
Not when Daniel raised his hand.
Not when the zipper showed.
Not when the envelope opened.
Only when the money stopped moving.
My father called the police at 3:18 p.m.
He gave his full name, our address, and said there had been an assault and attempted fraud at a family event. His voice stayed even until the dispatcher asked whether anyone was pregnant.
He looked at Lina sitting in the grass, the blue dress wrinkled around the crooked belly.
“No,” he said. “No one is pregnant.”
Two officers arrived fourteen minutes later.
The first one, Officer Grant, separated Daniel immediately and asked him to sit on the far side of the patio. Daniel obeyed. He put both hands flat on his knees. His wedding ring was scraped. A thin red line ran across one knuckle.
The second officer, a woman named Hale, crouched beside Lina.
“Do you need medical attention?” she asked.
Lina nodded too quickly.
“Yes. He hit me. I want him arrested.”
Officer Hale looked at the exposed zipper.
Then at the silicone edge under the torn seam.
“Are you pregnant?”
Lina’s mouth opened.
No answer came.
Officer Hale repeated it, softer.
“Ma’am, are you currently pregnant?”
Lina looked at my mother.
Mom stood under the kitchen doorway with both arms at her sides. There was no pleading in her face now. No grandmother glow. No frantic protection.
Just a woman watching a stranger wear her daughter’s skin.
“No,” Lina said.
The word barely reached us.
Officer Grant took the phone, the envelope, and my father’s camera as evidence. He photographed the fake belly before Lina removed it behind a towel my aunt held up with shaking hands.
When it came off, Lina looked unbearably ordinary.
Flat stomach under a wrinkled slip.
No miracle.
No emergency.
Just a person surrounded by gifts bought for a child who had never existed.
Daniel was not spared.
Officer Grant asked him why he struck her instead of calling police first.
Daniel rubbed both hands over his face.
“She was about to take the money and fake a miscarriage,” he said. “I thought if people saw it wasn’t real, they’d stop her.”
“That does not make hitting someone legal,” Officer Grant said.
“I know.”
Daniel did not argue.
He did not ask me to defend him.
He only looked at the grass between his shoes.
“I know.”
By 4:05 p.m., the guests were gone.
The backyard looked like the morning after a storm. Frosting dried on the tablecloth. Balloons sagged against the fence. A tiny pair of yellow baby socks, still tied with ribbon, lay near the chair where Lina had been sitting.
My mother picked them up.
She held them for three seconds.
Then she placed them inside an empty gift bag and folded the top closed.
Lina was taken in one police car to give a statement about the fraud complaint. Daniel left in another for the assault report. Neither looked back at the house.
I sat on the patio step with my father’s camera strap in my lap, though the camera itself was gone.
My father came outside carrying two paper plates.
On each plate was a slice of the untouched vanilla cake.
He handed one to me.
The frosting was too sweet. The cake was dry at the edges. We ate without talking while my mother stood by the bassinet and removed the gold bow.
At 6:27 p.m., her phone rang.
It was the bank confirming the canceled transfer.
She listened, said thank you, and hung up.
Then she opened the drawer under the patio table and took out the guest list.
One by one, she called every person who had given Lina cash.
Her voice did not crack.
“This is Diane. Please do not send anything else. There is no baby. We are handling it with police.”
Some people gasped.
Some went silent.
One woman began crying.
My mother kept making the calls.
At 8:03 p.m., Daniel texted me from the police station.
I am sorry I made you watch that. I should have handed you the evidence first.
I stared at the message until the screen dimmed.
Then I typed back:
Yes. You should have.
I did not add anything else.
The next morning, Lina’s apartment manager found three unopened boxes in her closet: a maternity dress in green, a pack of printed ultrasound film, and a second silicone belly still sealed in plastic.
The detective sent my father a photo for the case file.
My mother looked at it once.
Then she walked to the hallway, took the ultrasound picture out of her purse, and laid it flat on the kitchen table.
The paper had softened at the corners from being touched so often.
For a long time, she pressed two fingers over the fake white curve.
Then she folded it in half.
Not angrily.
Carefully.
Like closing a small door.
A week later, the bassinet was returned. The stroller too. The store refunded only part of the nursery set, but Mom did not complain. She put the money in a separate account and labeled it with one word:
Recovered.
Daniel accepted a misdemeanor charge and community service. He also agreed to counseling and a no-contact order with Lina. He never once called himself a hero. That mattered more than any apology he could have performed in front of people.
Lina was charged with fraud after the clinic documents, messages, and vendor receipts were verified. Aunt Carol got her $7,500 back because Daniel had stopped the second transfer before Lina could move the first cash gifts through a payment app. My parents did not attend Lina’s first court date. They sent the evidence through the detective and stayed home.
That day, Mom washed every baby blanket left in the house.
She folded them into a clear storage bin.
She did not donate them.
She did not throw them away.
She carried the bin to the garage and placed it on the highest shelf.
At 2:46 p.m., exactly one week after the shower, my father walked into the backyard and cut down the last sagging balloon.
The string stuck to his palm.
He rolled it slowly around his fingers, then dropped it into the trash bag beside the ruined ribbons, the paper cups, and the gold bow from the bassinet.
My mother stood at the kitchen window watching him.
Her phone buzzed once on the counter.
Lina’s name appeared.
Mom looked at it until the screen went dark.
Then she turned the phone face down and picked up the bank folder instead.