That was when I felt a gentle tug at my sleeve.
I looked down to see my daughter June—barely four years old—her dark curls tied back with a ribbon I had braided that morning with unsteady hands. Her eyes were wide, but thoughtful rather than afraid, the way children’s eyes are when they’re noticing far more than adults expect.
She slipped out of the pew and stepped into the aisle, her small shoes tapping softly against the wood. Before I could stop her, she reached Pastor Reynolds and tugged lightly on his sleeve.
“Excuse me,” she said clearly. “Should I tell everyone what Grandma put in the baby bottles?”
The room seemed to lose all air.
At first, nothing happened—no gasps, no whispers—only a dense, crushing silence that swallowed every sound. The pastor froze mid-gesture. Faces turned in slow disbelief, eyes shifting from June to Margaret and back again.
Margaret shot to her feet, her chair screeching loudly across the floor. “That’s enough,” she snapped, panic finally cracking her polished exterior. “She’s confused. She’s only a child.”
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