A Radiologist Saw One Detail At Her Sister’s Gender Reveal Party-Quieen - Chainityai

A Radiologist Saw One Detail At Her Sister’s Gender Reveal Party-Quieen

The backyard looked perfect in the way family parties only look perfect before anyone has had time to remember all the things they are carrying.

The sun was bright over Lena’s fence.

Not harsh, not burning, just warm enough to make the white siding glow and turn the plastic cups on the patio table into little circles of light.

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Blue streamers twisted above the deck.

Pink ribbon curled from the legs of the folding tables.

The grill gave off that familiar Saturday smell of burgers, onions, lighter fluid, and cut grass, and somewhere near the hydrangeas, a speaker played a soft country song nobody was really listening to.

People kept saying it was a beautiful day.

They meant the weather.

They meant the baby.

They meant the fact that, after two years of disappointment and quiet doctor visits Lena did not always talk about, my sister was finally standing in her own backyard with one hand over her belly and a smile that made everyone around her relax.

I wanted to relax too.

I wanted to be only her older sister that afternoon.

Not the radiologist.

Not the person relatives leaned toward when a word on a medical form scared them.

Not the person who knew how quickly joy could turn into a hallway conversation with fluorescent lights overhead and a paper cup of bad coffee shaking in someone’s hand.

I had come wearing jeans, a cream blouse, and the silver bracelet Lena gave me when I passed my boards.

I had brought a gift bag with yellow tissue paper because Lena had asked everyone not to bring pink or blue until after the reveal.

She had laughed when she said it.

“Let me have my drama,” she told me on the phone the night before. “One day. One balloon. One ridiculous countdown.”

I promised her I would.

That was what made the moment so cruel.

The whole afternoon had been arranged around the idea that there would be one clean answer.

A boy or a girl.

Pink or blue.

A cheer, a laugh, a few happy tears, and then plates of food on people’s knees while the baby’s future got passed around like another party favor.

There were tiny question marks on the cupcakes.

There was a chalkboard sign by the hedge that said Team Pink and Team Blue in Lena’s neat handwriting.

There was a small American flag tucked into a flowerpot near the deck steps, the kind people buy around Memorial Day and forget to take inside.

It stirred once in the breeze and settled.

Nothing about the yard looked dangerous.

Nothing about my sister looked afraid.

Lena had always moved through hope with her whole body.

When we were kids, she believed every abandoned kitten was waiting for us personally.

She taped glitter stars to her bedroom ceiling and gave every stuffed animal a full name, a birthday, and a tragic backstory.

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