I carried my sister’s baby for nine months, believing I was giving her the greatest gift. Six days after birth, I found the infant abandoned on my porch with a note that broke my heart into a million pieces.
I always thought my sister and I would grow old together, sharing everything. Laughter, secrets, and maybe even our kids growing up as best friends.
That’s what sisters do, right?
Claire was the oldest at 38. She was graceful, composed, and always put together. She was the one everyone admired at family gatherings.
I was 34, the messy one, and always running five minutes late with my hair barely brushed but my heart wide open.
By the time she asked me the biggest favor of my life, I already had two children.
A seven-year-old boy named Liam, who asked a million questions every day, and a four-year-old girl named Sophie, who believed she could talk to butterflies.
My life was far from glamorous or Instagram-worthy, but it was full of love, noise, and little sticky fingerprints on every single wall.
When Claire married Ethan, who was 40 and worked in finance, I was genuinely happy for her. They had everything I’d been told mattered in life. A beautiful home in the suburbs with a perfectly landscaped yard, good jobs with benefits, and the picture-perfect life you see in magazine spreads.
The only thing missing was a child.
They tried for years to have one.
IVF after IVF, hormone shots that left her bruised and emotional, and miscarriages that broke her a little more each time. I saw what it did to her, how each loss dimmed the light in her eyes just a bit more until she barely seemed like my sister anymore.
So, when she asked me to be their surrogate, I didn’t even hesitate for a second.
“If I can carry a baby for you, then that’s what I’ll do,” I told her, reaching across the kitchen table to squeeze her hand.
She cried right there, tears streaming down her face as she grabbed both my hands. She hugged me so tight I could barely breathe.
“You’re saving us,” she whispered into my shoulder.
“You’re literally saving our lives.”
We didn’t rush into it, though.
We talked for weeks with doctors who explained every risk and possibility, with lawyers who drew up contracts, and with our parents who had concerns and questions. Every conversation ended the same way, with Claire’s eyes filled with hope and mine with tears of empathy.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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