At my baby shower, my sister handed me a broken stroller. “It suits her life,” she laughed. “Alone and falling apart.” My mother smirked, adding, “She’s lucky she was even invited.” I stayed silent. But when my husband pressed the hidden button on the stroller, the entire room went silent…

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The Stroller and the Storm
I never imagined my baby shower would end in a silence so sharp it felt like glass shattering around me. I sat there, eight months pregnant, my hands resting protectively on my belly, as my sister stood across from me, smirking. She gestured to the battered, rust-stained stroller she had just presented as a gift.

“It fits her life,” she said with a dry, cruel laugh. “Alone and falling apart.” My mother, standing beside her, added, “She’s lucky she was even invited.” I wanted to scream, to cry, to run. But my husband, Ezra, just gave my hand a gentle squeeze and whispered, “Just wait.”

Chapter 1: The Golden Child and the Ghost
If you had asked me a year ago what my baby shower would be like, I would have painted you a picture of laughter, fresh flowers, and the warm embrace of a family that was proud of me.

Instead, I got my sister Veronica’s smirk and a stroller that looked like it had been salvaged from a junkyard. But before all that, before the insult and the suffocating silence, I was actually excited. The morning of the shower, I stood in my living room, arranging the pastel-frosted cupcakes I had spent all night decorating.

The whole house smelled of cinnamon and vanilla, and for a fleeting, beautiful moment, I let myself believe it was going to be a good day. My husband, Ezra, walked in holding a balloon bouquet shaped like a giraffe. He kissed my forehead.

“It’s perfect, Cali,” he said. I smiled, but there was a nervous flutter in my stomach—not the baby kicking, but the familiar, old anxiety that warned me something might go wrong. I had invited everyone, even the ones I wasn’t sure I should have.

My sister, Veronica, and my mother, Darla. I invited them because I thought, Maybe this time it will be different. Maybe now that I was about to become a mother, they would finally see me.

The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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