I never thought the man I loved would turn me into a transaction. Doug and I had been married seven years, raising our five-year-old son in a house that smelled of crayons and coffee. When his boss, Monica, couldn’t carry a child, Doug suggested I be her surrogate — “for our future,” he said. The money could clear our debts, he promised, and maybe even earn him a promotion. Against every instinct in me, I agreed.
The pregnancy turned me into an object. Monica hovered, controlling everything I ate, everything I did. Doug worked late, came home smelling of perfume that wasn’t mine. When I delivered the baby, Monica took her without letting me hold her. Three days later, she left with the child, Doug deposited the check — and then he vanished. His note said it all: “You’ll be fine. The money’s my compensation. Consider it closure.”
Years later, I’d rebuilt my life — new job, new strength — when I walked into a meeting and saw Doug and Monica across the table. They didn’t recognize me at first. An audit soon revealed Monica’s embezzlement and their affair. The baby I’d carried was Doug’s. I had been the surrogate for their betrayal. When I learned that the little girl was now in foster care, I fought to bring her home.
Today, Sophie calls me “Mom.” My son, Ethan, calls her “sister.” Our home is small but full of laughter and light. Doug wrote from prison asking to meet, but I shredded the letter. Revenge isn’t my story. Survival is. Healing is. Love is. I didn’t get even — I got everything that mattered: a family that chose me back.




