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After His Ex Called My Daughter “Her Baby” Novel Cover

After His Ex Called My Daughter “Her Baby”

I noticed her hands first. She was unpacking the dishwasher when I came downstairs that first morning — moving through our kitchen like she'd done it a hundred times. Reached for the cabinet above the coffee maker without looking. Stacked the mugs in the right order, handles facing out, the way I'd arranged them years ago. I stood in the doorway in my robe and watched her do it, and I thought: Darren must have given her a tour. I told myself that. Her name was Lyla. That was all Darren gave me — Lyla, referred by a colleague, available immediately, great with kids. He'd hired her without asking me, which I didn't love, but July had been going through a clingy phase and I was pulling double shifts at the bakery before the holiday rush. I let it go.
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Chapter 3

I found out about the photograph the way I found out about most things that month — through July.

She'd been playing in our bedroom closet since she was three. It was a game she invented herself: she'd drag out Darren's old scarves and my spare handbags and build herself a little fort in the back corner, narrating the whole thing in a whisper. I used to stand in the doorway and listen to her and think: this is what safe sounds like.

I was in the kitchen when she came padding down the hall, both hands wrapped around a shoebox.

"Mama." She held it out to me. "I found a picture."

The box was dusty. The kind of dust that builds up over years, not months. I set down my coffee and took it from her.

Inside, wrapped in a piece of cloth, was a framed photo.

A woman. Younger than she was now, laughing at something off-camera, her hair loose. She was standing in front of a window I recognized — the tall industrial windows of the Belltown apartment. The one Darren told me he'd given up.

I looked at it for a long moment. My face didn't move. I was getting very good at that.

"Who is she?" July asked. She was studying me the way she'd been studying everything lately — carefully, like she was trying to read something written in a language she almost knew.

"Someone from a long time ago," I said. "Before you were born."

July considered this. "She's pretty."

"Yeah." I closed the box. "She is."

I put the box in my bag. Not Darren's closet. Mine.

That night I added it to the notebook. *Framed photo. Kept. Hidden. Not forgotten.*

Five pages now.

---

The next morning, Darren left for work at eight.

I was at the kitchen counter going through invoices for the bakery, half a cup of coffee going cold beside me. July was at preschool. The house was quiet in the way it only got when it was just the two of us — me and Lylah — and I had learned to feel that quiet like a change in air pressure.

She came in from the hallway. She didn't say anything at first. She just moved to the other side of the counter and stood there, and I kept my eyes on my laptop, and I waited.

"You know you're not her real mother."

Her voice was different. Flat. No softness in it, no performance. This was the voice she used when Darren wasn't in the room.

"You know that, right?" She tilted her head slightly. "You're just the woman he settled for while he waited."

I looked up.

She was watching me with something that wasn't quite contempt and wasn't quite curiosity. Like she was running an experiment. Like she'd been waiting to see what I'd do when she finally said it out loud.

I looked at her for a long moment. I thought about July's face in the hallway the night of the kitchen. I thought about the braids, the lunch notes, the *my baby* dropped like a stone into still water. I thought about a shoebox wrapped in cloth, hidden in the back of a closet, kept for years.

"Get out of my kitchen," I said.

Not loud. Not shaking. Just a fact.

Something moved across her face — fast, almost invisible. Then we both heard it: tires on the wet driveway, the particular sound of Darren's car.

The softness came back. Like a light switching on. She turned toward the window with a small, private smile, and by the time the front door opened she looked like a woman who had been quietly minding her own business.

I looked back at my laptop.

I wrote it down that night. Every word. The flat voice. The exact phrasing. The smile when she heard his car.

Nora was going to want all of it.

---

The call from Sandra Okafor came at 2:17 on a Thursday afternoon.

I was elbow-deep in a batch of brown butter for the weekend menu when my phone lit up with the preschool's number. I answered it with one hand, the other still holding the pan.

"Ms. Daniels." Sandra's voice was careful. Controlled. The voice of a woman who had learned to deliver bad news without making it worse. "I need to let you know — July was picked up about twenty minutes ago. By a woman who identified herself as her mother. She wasn't on the approved contact list."

The pan went down on the burner.

"I called as soon as I realized," Sandra said. "I'm so sorry. She had ID, and the man who dropped July off this morning — I assumed —"

"You did the right thing calling me," I said. "Thank you."

I hung up and called Darren.

He answered on the third ring. "Hey, I was just about to —"

"Where is July."

A pause. "She's with Lylah. They went to get ice cream, I thought it would be —"

"She is not on the approved pickup list." I walked to the back office and closed the door. "She has no legal standing to collect our daughter from school. And you gave her access without telling me."

"Ember, she's July's mother —"

"She is a woman who abandoned July as a newborn and has no custodial rights. That is what she is, legally. And you went around me to give her access to our child."

Silence.

"Bring July home," I said. "Now. And understand that I am writing this down."

I hung up.

I stood in the back office with my hand still on the phone and I breathed. In. Out. The way I'd been practicing — keeping the shaking on the inside, where it couldn't be used against me.

Then I opened my notebook.

Unauthorized pickup. Darren provided access. Sandra Okafor — witness. Timestamp: 2:17 PM.

I wrote it all down.

Six pages.

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