I was five months pregnant when I decided my stepdaughter’s room would become the nursery.
I didn’t ease into the conversation. I didn’t ask her opinion. I stood in her doorway, hands planted on my hips, taking in the lavender walls and the perfectly made bed, and spoke as if the decision had already been sealed.
“You’re going to have to move out of this room.
We need it for the baby.”
She went still. Emma was fourteen—caught in that fragile space between childhood and adulthood, where you feel too grown to be small but still too small for the world. She sat cross-legged on her bed, headphones resting around her neck, schoolbooks scattered before her.
Slowly, she lifted her eyes to mine.
“Move… where?” she asked.
“The living room sofa,” I replied. “It’s only temporary.”
Her expression crumbled before she could hide it. She tried to hold back her tears, but one escaped and slid down her cheek.
“But this is my room,” she murmured.
Something tight and painful flickered inside me—maybe guilt—but I buried it.
I was exhausted. Emotional. Overwhelmed.
Everything felt immediate and urgent.
“My child is our priority from now on,” I snapped. “You’ll understand when you’re older.”
That was when I crossed the line.
Emma didn’t argue. She didn’t protest.
She simply nodded, brushed her face with her sleeve, and started packing up her things. Clothes. Books.
A framed picture of her and her dad at the beach from years ago. That night, she slept on the couch with a thin blanket and a pillow that kept slipping to the floor.
Her father—my husband, Mark—hardly spoke to me. He moved through the house stiffly, jaw tight, eyes far away.
I convinced myself he just needed time to adjust. A baby was coming, after all. Of course things would feel strained.
Still, the silence pressed in—heavy and condemning.
Two days later, while Mark was at work, I searched his desk for a pen and felt my fingers graze a slim folder tucked deep in the back, almost concealed.
On the tab, written neatly, were the words:
“Surprise for Sandra!”
My stomach twisted.
After a moment’s hesitation, I opened it.
Inside were drawings—careful, detailed sketches of Emma’s bedroom redesigned as a shared space. A crib positioned beside her bed. Shelving built upward instead of outward.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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