I was five months pregnant when I decided my stepdaughter’s room would become the nursery. I didn’t announce it gently. I didn’t ask.
I stood in the doorway of her room, hands on my hips, staring at the lavender walls and the neatly made bed, and said the words as if they were already final. “You’re going to have to move out of this room. We need it for the baby.”
She froze.
Emma was fourteen—awkward in that in-between age where you’re not a child anymore but the world still feels too big. She was sitting on her bed, headphones around her neck, homework spread out in front of her. Slowly, she looked up at me.
“Move… where?” she asked. “The living room sofa,” I said. “It’s only temporary.”
Her face crumpled before she could stop it.
She tried to blink back tears, but one slipped free and rolled down her cheek. “But this is my room,” she whispered. I felt something sharp flicker in my chest—guilt, maybe—but I pushed it down.
I was tired. Hormonal. Scared.
Everything felt urgent. “My child is our priority from now on,” I snapped. “You’ll understand when you’re older.”
That was the moment I crossed a line.
Emma didn’t argue. She didn’t raise her voice. She just nodded, wiped her face with her sleeve, and began gathering her things.
Clothes. Books. A framed photo of her and her dad at the beach years ago.
That night, she slept on the sofa with a thin blanket and a pillow that kept sliding onto the floor. Her father—my husband, Mark—barely spoke to me. He moved stiffly around the house, jaw clenched, eyes distant.
I told myself he was just processing the change. After all, a baby was coming. Things were bound to be tense.
But the silence felt heavy. Judgmental. Two days later, while Mark was at work, I was looking for a pen in his desk drawer when my fingers brushed against a slim folder tucked far back, almost hidden.
My name was written on the tab in neat handwriting:
“Surprise for Sandra!”
My stomach dropped. I hesitated, then opened it. Inside were sketches—detailed, careful drawings of Emma’s room transformed into a shared space.
A crib tucked neatly beside her bed. Shelves built upward instead of outward. Under-bed storage.
Soft colors that blended both of their worlds. There were notes in the margins: “So baby doesn’t wake Emma,” and “Extra space for her desk.”
My throat tightened. This wasn’t rushed.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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