My parents told me I was adopted for 26 years, and I believed them—until my drunk aunt grabbed my arm at my cousin’s wedding and laughed, “You look exactly like Uncle David.”

For twenty-six years, my parents told me I was adopted, and I believed every word—until my intoxicated aunt grabbed my arm at my cousin’s wedding and laughed, “You look exactly like Uncle David.” The room fell silent. I laughed along… then suddenly stopped. One month later, I opened my DNA results and whispered, “So who’s been lying to me?” By Friday, three families would never speak to one another the same way again.

My parents had told me I was adopted for my entire twenty-six years of life, and I never doubted them until my drunk aunt destroyed my cousin’s wedding with a single remark.

The reception took place at a vineyard outside Napa, the kind of elegant venue where every table was decorated with white roses and gold chargers while relatives quietly judged one another behind polite smiles. I stood near the bar holding a glass of champagne I barely wanted when Aunt Marlene wandered toward me, her lipstick slightly uneven and her eyes unusually bright.

She caught my wrist and laughed.

“You know what’s funny, Emma?” she said. “You look just like Uncle David.”

I laughed because that seemed like the proper response when a drunk relative said something odd.

Then the laughter died in my throat.

Uncle David was not some distant family member. He was my father’s younger brother—tall, red-haired, green-eyed, and well known in the family for vanishing to Seattle years earlier after what everyone vaguely referred to as “a misunderstanding.”

My hair was red.

My eyes were green.

My parents, Robert and Linda Harris, both had dark hair and brown eyes. They had always explained the difference with a single word: adoption.

For twenty-six years, they claimed they had chosen me through a private agency in Sacramento. They told me my biological mother had been a college student who wanted to give me a better future. They said there were no documents because the adoption had been closed.

Whenever I pushed for details, my mother started crying.

Eventually, I stopped asking.

Across the reception room, I looked toward my parents. My mother was glaring at Aunt Marlene as though she wanted to pull her outside by force. My father’s face had turned completely gray.

Aunt Marlene blinked, suddenly aware of what she had revealed.

“Oh,” she whispered. “You don’t know.”

My heartbeat accelerated. “Know what?”

She released my wrist. “Forget it.”

But forgetting was impossible.

One month later, I ordered a DNA test using a fake email account and mailed it from a post office three towns away.

When the results came back, I opened them alone in my apartment.

The screen did not identify me as an adopted stranger.

It showed that I was a close biological match to David Harris.

Predicted relationship: father.

By Friday, three families would be torn apart.

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