I did a DNA test on my granddaughters because something in my blood was screaming that my son wasn’t their father. I thought I was going to unmask my daughter-in-law, but the result ended up pointing to someone much closer. The envelope arrived on a Tuesday, while I was warming up pancakes on the griddle. My son, Matthew, smiled at me from a photo on the wall. And when I read the first line, I felt like my whole house was collapsing on top of me.

I did a DNA test on my granddaughters because something in my blood was screaming that my son wasn’t their father. I thought I was going to unmask my daughter-in-law, but the result ended up pointing to someone much closer. The envelope arrived on a Tuesday, while I was warming up pancakes on the griddle. My son, Matthew, smiled at me from a photo on the wall. And when I read the first line, I felt like my whole house was collapsing on top of me.

Brenda closed the door carefully, as if the noise could wake the dead.

—“It’s not what you think.”

I laughed humorlessly.

—“What do you think I think, Brenda? That you tripped twice and two little girls popped out?”

She looked down. Her lips were trembling, but not from shame. It was fear. Good fear. The kind you can’t fake.

—“Alexa and Chloe’s dad… is Julian.”

I felt the floor disappear.

Julian.

My younger brother.

The boy I carried when my mother died. The man I gave a roof to when he got out of jail for stealing auto parts. The same one who sat at my table every Sunday, ate my chili, and called the girls “princesses” while Matthew smiled, believing it was pure uncle’s affection.

—“No,” I said.

Brenda started to cry.

—“Mrs. Helen, I swear I didn’t want to.”

I stood up so fast that the envelope fell to the floor.

—“Don’t swear anything to me in this house.”

She brought her hands to her chest.

—“Julian threatened me. He told me if I spoke, he was going to destroy Matthew. That you would never believe me. That the girls would be left with nothing.”

—“And what did you do?” I asked her. —“You preferred to destroy my son slowly?”

Brenda covered her mouth.

I wanted to slap her. I wanted to rip those tears, which were already too late, from her face. But then I heard a laugh from downstairs.

Chloe.

My little girl.

—“Grandma, the pancakes burned!”

The smell of burnt batter drifted up the stairs like a mockery from God.

Brenda tried to grab my hand.

—“Please, don’t tell Matthew like this. He won’t be able to bear it.”

Something inside me broke right there.

—“And when did you think about what he could bear? When he worked double shifts to buy them uniforms? When he skipped dinner because Alexa’s tummy hurt? When he defended you every time I said something didn’t add up?”

Brenda fell to her knees.

—“I loved him.”

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