“There’s shrimp,” I choked out. “There’s shrimp in this.”
Margaret lifted her brows innocently. “Shrimp? In roasted chicken?”
A few guests laughed awkwardly.
Daniel rose halfway from his chair, his face red with emb:arrassment. “Claire, Mom organized this entire dinner for us. Don’t accuse her just because you’re uncomfortable with attention being on me for once.”
I stared at him in disbelief.
“I can’t breathe,” I whispered.
His eyes darted toward the guests before returning to me. “You said the same thing at Mom’s birthday dinner when she served crab cakes.”
“Because they were crab cakes.”
Margaret sighed gracefully, like a saint exhausted by a difficult sinner. “Daniel, maybe she just needs fresh air. Pregnancy makes women emotional.”
The room began to blur around me.
My lips tingled. My chest burned. A violent cramp folded me forward, and my fork crashed against the plate.
Someone shouted, “Call 911!”
Daniel finally moved, but even then it felt too late. He grabbed my arm like helping me was a burden forced upon him. “Claire, look at me. Stop panicking.”
I wanted to scream at him that this wasn’t panic.
This was poison.
By the time flashing ambulance lights painted Margaret’s mansion red and blue, I was drifting in and out of consciousness. The last thing I saw before a paramedic pressed an oxygen mask over my face was Margaret standing calmly in the foyer, one hand resting on Daniel’s shoulder as she whispered, “She always ruins everything.”
I woke in the hospital surrounded by white lights, machines, and silence.
Daniel sat beside the bed looking pale.