A Baby’s Red Hair Started The Rumor. The DNA Test Exposed Aunt Diane-heyily

The first thing people noticed about Ruby was her hair.

Not her fingers curling around Grant’s thumb.

Not the soft little sigh she made after a bottle.

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Not the way her whole face changed when she heard her father’s voice.

Her hair.

Copper-red, bright under sunlight, soft as the fuzz on a peach, and impossible for certain people to leave alone.

I never thought a baby’s hair color could become a family trial.

But Aunt Diane had a gift for turning ordinary things into accusations.

The first time she made the joke, Ruby was only a few weeks old.

We were at my mother’s house in Franklin, Tennessee, where the kitchen always smelled faintly of coffee, lemon dish soap, and whatever casserole someone had brought over because a new baby makes people believe food can fix exhaustion.

I was standing by the island with Ruby tucked against my chest.

Grant was in the dining room, helping my father move chairs.

Diane looked at Ruby, tilted her head, and smiled like she had just found something clever hidden in the room.

“That little girl doesn’t really look like your husband, does she?”

A few people gave that nervous little laugh people use when they want a mean comment to pass by without stopping.

I did not laugh.

Ruby was asleep, her cheek warm against my shirt, her copper hair glowing in the strip of morning light from the window.

My hair was light brown.

Grant’s was dark.

That was apparently enough for Diane to build a whole courtroom in her head and appoint herself judge.

The truth was simple.

My grandmother Eleanor had red hair when she was young.

Grant’s great-grandfather had the same shade in old family photographs.

Our pediatrician explained it in the most ordinary way possible.

Recessive genes.

Family history.

Nothing unusual.

I wrote it down after Ruby’s two-month appointment because I was tired and trying to keep track of everything back then.

Tuesday, March 12.

10:40 a.m.

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