At Dinner, My Sister Announced She Was Pregnant – and That My Husband Is the Father…

During dinner, my sister said she was pregnant and that the father is my husband. But then I revealed a secret.
You know when you think you know the people closest to you, when you believe that no matter what problems exist, certain lines would never be crossed? Well, I thought so too.
My name is Marina, I’m 29 years old, and this is the story of how I discovered that some people are capable of anything to get what they want.
It was a Thursday in March when I received news of my promotion. After four years working as a project manager at a tech company in Austin, Texas, I would finally be commercial director.
I couldn’t stop smiling at the office. I called David, my husband, and Beatrice, my younger sister, to share the joy.
“Let’s celebrate at Terzo tonight,” I suggested.
Terzo was that chic Italian restaurant where a meal cost more than minimum wage. But I could afford it; I worked hard for this.
I arrived at the restaurant first, wearing that navy blue dress that David always said looked perfect on me. I chose a table in a more secluded corner because I wanted privacy to celebrate.,
The dining room was full of executives and elegant couples. It was the kind of environment where I felt comfortable after years building my career.
When I saw them arriving together, I found it strange. Beatrice was radiant with a smile I hadn’t seen in a long time, and David seemed nervous.
He always got a bit uncomfortable in expensive places. But there was something different that night, a tension in the air that I couldn’t identify.
“Congratulations on the promotion, Mari!” Beatrice hugged me with suspicious effusiveness.
She was never very demonstrative with affection, especially with me. We ordered a $200 bottle of Chianti, and I started telling them about the new projects I would lead, the 40% salary increase, and the possibilities for international growth.
Beatrice listened with too much attention. David kept fidgeting with his napkin.
“Actually,” Beatrice interrupted in the middle of my excitement, “we also have news to share.”
A Shocking Revelation
She took David’s hand across the table, and my stomach knotted inexplicably.,
“I’m pregnant,” she said.
The world stopped. Literally stopped.
The restaurant voices became a distant buzz. The lights seemed to flicker, and I stared at my sister’s hand intertwined with my husband’s as if it were a mirage.
Beatrice was pregnant with David’s child.
“I know it’s a complicated situation,” David spoke for the first time since they arrived, his voice coming out.
“But it happened and we… we fell in love.”
They watched me with a mixture of expectation and poorly disguised satisfaction. It was as if they were waiting for me to explode, scream, or make a scene that would give the other tables something interesting to talk about later.
But I couldn’t do anything but stare. My sister Beatrice, whom I helped pay for college when our parents couldn’t, was there holding my husband’s hand, pregnant with his child, telling me this on the day of my promotion.
“How long?” I managed to ask, my voice coming out strangely calm.
“3 months,” Beatrice replied, running her hand over her still imperceptible belly.,
“It started right after your birthday.”
My birthday had been in December. It was May; three months of betrayal, three months of lies, three months of them laughing at me while I worked 12 hours a day to get this promotion I so wanted to share with the people I loved.
“Marina, say something,” David asked.
And for the first time in years, I really looked at him, really paid attention to the man I had been married to for four years. He looked relieved, as if a weight had been lifted from his shoulders, as if this was liberating for him.
“What do you want me to say?” I asked, still in that strange voice that didn’t sound like mine.
“Congratulations,” Beatrice laughed, a nervous laugh but genuine.
“Look Mari, I know it’s not easy, but these things happen. Love is love, right? And the baby…”
She ran her hand over her belly again.
“The baby needs both parents together.”
I picked up my purse slowly, left two $50 bills on the table, more than enough to cover my part of the bill, and stood up.
“I’m going home. You do whatever you want.”,
Shadows of the Past
As I walked toward the exit, I heard David calling my name, but I didn’t turn around. In the wall mirror of the restaurant, I could see their reflections still sitting at the table.
Beatrice was smiling. Throughout childhood, Beatrice lived in my shadow, and this irritated her deeply.
I was the older daughter, the responsible one, the one who got good grades without having to try very hard. She was the youngest, the spoiled one, the one our parents protected from everything.
But for some reason, this was never enough for her. We grew up in a middle-class family in San Antonio.
Our father worked as an accountant at an oil company, and our mother was an elementary school teacher. We weren’t rich, but we didn’t lack anything either.
Even so, Beatrice always had the impression that she deserved more. When I got a full scholarship to study business administration at the University of Texas, Beatrice made sure to say it was rich girls’ luck.
When I graduated with honors and got an internship at a multinational in Austin, she commented that I always knew how to sell myself.,
When I bought my first apartment at 25, she asked if I wasn’t being too ambitious. The worst part is that she really believed she deserved the same things I had but without the effort.
As if success was a matter of luck or favoritism, not hard work and sacrifice. Beatrice studied graphic design at a public university, graduated without much distinction, and since then jumped from job to job, always complaining that bosses didn’t recognize her potential.
Our parents always tried to balance things out. When I bought my new Honda Civic, they bought a used one for her too.
When I started earning well, they increased the help they gave her to pay rent for a small apartment in downtown San Antonio. It was as if they were trying to compensate for my success by keeping Beatrice at the same level artificially.
She always asked about my salary, my investments, and the apartment’s value.
“Just sisterly curiosity,” she’d say.
But there was an intensity in the way she asked that bothered me. Now I understood it wasn’t curiosity; it was pure envy mixed with greed that I refused to see.,
When I met David at a work party five years ago, Beatrice made sure to say he wasn’t my type. He was handsome and nice, and worked as a salesman at a BMW dealership.
He earned reasonably well by Texas standards, about $5,000 a month with commissions, but nothing compared to my 8,000 salary that soon became 12,000.
Still, I fell in love. He was fun, affectionate, and made me laugh after stressful days at the office.
David had a simplicity that attracted me, an uncomplicated way of seeing life that contrasted with my nature of always planning three steps ahead.
Beatrice was always polite with David. But I noticed a certain tension, especially when we all went out together and the bill arrived.
David sometimes felt embarrassed when I paid for restaurants that cost $100 per person or when we bought concert tickets that cost $200 each. Beatrice observed all this with that calculating look I knew well but preferred to ignore.,
“You support him, don’t you?” she asked once when David went to the bathroom during a family lunch at Olive Garden.
“I don’t support him,” I replied, irritated.
“We split things proportionally to our income.”
It was true. David paid the bills he could: groceries, gas, some household bills, and I covered the rest.
It worked for us. But for Beatrice, that was more proof that I had too much luck: a brilliant career, a beautiful two-bedroom apartment in Austin, a dedicated husband, and investments that grew month by month.
As if I hadn’t fought for every achievement, as if everything had fallen from the sky.
