I volunteered to be a surrogate and carried my best friend’s baby for nine months. The moment her baby boy was born, she took one look at him and said, “I can’t take him.” I became numb. I gave her a child. She gave me a truth I wasn’t prepared to hear.
When my best friend, Rachel, told me she couldn’t carry a pregnancy to term, I was the one who said it first: “Let me do it. Let me carry your baby.”
Carrying a baby in my womb for the third time felt like a strange, fragile wonder. Rachel came to every ultrasound, gripping my hand and calling her baby our miracle before he even had a name.
“Let me carry your baby.”
I threw up throughout most of the pregnancy. My mom and my two kids were the ones holding my hair back and keeping the house running while I worked.
Twenty-one hours. That’s how long labor took. Every single one of them was the kind of pain that makes you bargain with things you don’t even believe in.
By the time they placed him in the nurse’s arms and he let out that first furious cry, I had nothing left. No words. No tears. Just the hollow, wrung-out relief of a body that had finally finished doing the most enormous thing it had ever been asked to do.
Twenty-one hours. That’s how long labor took.
Rachel was beside me the whole time, gripping my hand so hard my fingers had gone numb somewhere around hour 14.
The nurse cleaned the baby and wrapped him in a white blanket. Rachel stepped forward, trembling, eyes already wet, reaching. And then she stopped.
The nurse had shifted the blanket to check the baby’s legs, and there it was: a dark, jagged birthmark running along his upper thigh, roughly the size and shape of a thumb pressed into his skin.
Rachel’s face drained so completely it frightened me.
“No,” she whispered.
Rachel’s face drained so completely it frightened me.
“It’s just a birthmark,” the nurse said gently, still smiling. “Very common.”
Rachel stepped back. Her hand came up to her mouth.
“I can’t take him.”
The room fell silent. Her husband, Marcus, looked at her from across the room with an expression that started as confusion and shifted into something else entirely. Something that looked a lot like fear.
“Rachel,” he said. “What are you doing?”
“It’s just a birthmark.”
She didn’t answer him. She pointed at the birthmark. And then she said, in a voice I’d never once heard from her in 15 years of friendship, “That’s not possible. I’ve seen that exact mark before… years ago, when Daniel used to jog with you in the summers, both of you in shorts.”
I didn’t know what that meant. But Marcus did.
I was still shaking. My body was raw, the blanket around my shoulders doing nothing, and I watched my best friend fall apart in front of me without understanding a single piece of why.
Marcus had gone the color of old concrete. He wasn’t confused anymore. He was terrified.
I didn’t know what that meant.
Rachel immediately grabbed her phone and made a call.
“Get your wife on the line,” she said. “She deserves to see this.”
Nearly 30 minutes later, a young couple came rushing through the ward door.
Rachel turned on them the second they walked in.
“How could you?” she demanded, her voice breaking at every seam. “That’s your baby, Daniel. I’ve seen that exact mark before, the summer you and Marcus used to jog in shorts. You’re the only one who has it.”
The man, Daniel, opened his mouth. But nothing came out.
A young couple came rushing through the ward door.
“Birthmarks like that can run in families,” the nurse added carefully. “But it would take a test to confirm anything.”
“There’s no need for a test,” Marcus said too quickly. He ran a hand over his face, already shaking his head. “I’ll tell you the truth.”
His confession came out like something that had been wedged behind his teeth for years.
“I had a vasectomy,” he admitted, facing Rachel. “Before we ever talked about children. When you brought up IVF, I panicked. I didn’t tell you. I used my brother Daniel’s sample instead of my own. I thought it wouldn’t matter. It was still your egg. I told the clinic we were using a previously stored donor sample. I handled the paperwork. You never saw the consent forms.”
“I thought it wouldn’t matter.”
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