A year after she stole my husband, my former best friend mailed me an invitation to her baby shower.
Rain on the Counter
It was the kind of afternoon rain that turned the city into a watercolor—gray streets, the dull thud of tires on wet asphalt, the faint hiss of steam rising from the manhole covers. I stood in my kitchen, the light above the sink humming a low, fluorescent buzz, and watched the droplets race each other down the windowpane. The smell of lemon cleaner and stale coffee lingered in the air, mixing with the faint perfume of the envelope that rested on the countertop.
It was a cream envelope, thick enough that the paper made a soft thump when I set it down. The flap was sealed with a tiny kiss of gold foil, and the scent that leaked out was a blend of roses and something sharper, like the after‑taste of a cheap cologne. My name, Naomi, was written in the looping script I recognized instantly—Camille’s hand, the same one that had once curled around my wrist at my twenty‑first birthday, the same one that had doodled hearts on the inside of my wedding invitation.
“Come celebrate our little miracle,” the words read in elegant gold, the letters catching the kitchen light and throwing tiny reflections onto the scarred wooden table.
Below, in a pink ink that seemed to tremble on the page, a smiley face sat beside a line I hadn’t expected: Sorry you couldn’t give him a son. 🙂
I froze. My breath caught, and the rain seemed to pause for a heartbeat, the world tilting just enough that the kitchen tiles looked like a board game. My eyes slid down to the other envelope, white and clinical, its surface smooth and unadorned. The DNA lab’s logo stared back at me from the top, a sterile black and white emblem that felt more like a verdict than a brand.
I lifted the lid with a trembling hand. Inside lay two sheets of paper. The first bore my ex‑husband’s name in bold: Daniel Mercer: congenital azoospermia. The report continued, each line a cold, clinical confirmation—sterile since birth, not just low fertility, not damaged, but an absolute impossibility of producing sperm.
