I agreed to become a surrogate and carried my best friend’s baby for nine months. But the moment her baby boy arrived, she looked at him once and whispered, “I can’t take him.”
My mind went numb. I had given her the child she had dreamed of, and in return she revealed a truth I was never ready to hear.
When my best friend Rachel told me she couldn’t carry a pregnancy safely, I was the one who first suggested it.
“Let me do it,” I told her. “I’ll carry the baby for you.”
Being pregnant for the third time felt strange and delicate, almost miraculous. Rachel came to every ultrasound appointment, squeezing my hand and calling the baby our miracle long before he even had a name.
The pregnancy wasn’t easy. I spent most of it sick and exhausted, while my mom and my two kids helped keep the house running so I could keep working.
Then labor came.
It lasted twenty-one hours—every moment filled with the kind of pain that makes you bargain with anything just to make it stop.
By the time the baby finally cried in the nurse’s arms, I was completely drained. No tears. No excitement. Just the empty relief that my body had finally finished the hardest thing it had ever been asked to do.
Rachel stayed beside me the whole time, holding my hand so tightly my fingers had gone numb somewhere around hour fourteen.
After the nurse cleaned the baby and wrapped him in a white blanket, Rachel stepped forward with trembling hands, ready to hold him.
But suddenly she stopped.
The nurse had shifted the blanket for a moment, revealing a dark birthmark along the baby’s upper thigh—about the size of a thumb pressed into his skin.
Rachel’s face instantly lost all color.
“No,” she whispered.
The nurse spoke gently. “It’s just a birthmark. They’re very common.”
Rachel slowly stepped backward, her hand covering her mouth.
“I can’t take him.”
The room fell completely silent. Her husband Marcus looked at her, confusion quickly turning into fear.
“Rachel,” he said carefully. “What are you doing?”
She didn’t answer him. Instead, she pointed toward the birthmark and spoke in a voice I had never heard from her in fifteen years of friendship.
“That mark… I’ve seen it before. Years ago, when Daniel used to jog with you in the summers. He had the exact same one.”
I didn’t understand what she meant.
But Marcus did.
