“Are you both crazy? I have nowhere to go! I’m carrying HIS children!”
“Twins, right?” She tilted her head, looking at my belly with cold calculation.
“Or is it triplets? You are rather… big. I think I can offer you a solution.”
Her lips curved into what she thought was a smile.
“I’ll rent you a house and cover all your expenses, but I want one of your babies.”
My blood ran cold. “What?!”
“I’d like to have a baby, but there’s no way I’m doing that to my body.” She pointed at my belly. “You’ll never manage raising twins alone, so this is a win-win situation.”
I couldn’t believe what I was hearing.
This woman talked like she was picking out a puppy! “I’ll raise the child as mine. They’ll have the best nannies, and go to the best schools…” she stroked Joss’s chest, and he leaned into her touch.
“And you get a roof over your head. It’s a fair deal.”
Joss nodded along as she spoke, like trading one of our babies was normal. I couldn’t breathe.
How dare they try to turn my babies into bargaining chips? I wanted to kick them both out, but they had me cornered. I had no family or close friends I could turn to.
But then a plan formed in my mind. “I have nowhere else to go,” I whispered, forcing tears to my eyes. “I’ll agree to your deal, but I have one condition.”
Kallista smirked.
“Smart girl. What’s the condition?”
“I want to pick which baby you get.” I sniffled, looking down as if ashamed. “Just give me some time with them to decide which one will have a better life with you.”
She exchanged a look with Joss.
They thought I was defeated—I could see it in their eyes. “Fine,” she agreed. “But don’t take too long.
Once they’re born, we’ll take the one you don’t want.”
I nodded, wiping away a fake tear. “And… one more thing.”
Kallista sighed dramatically. “What now?”
“You’ll buy me a house, not rent it,” I said firmly.
“I need security. If you don’t agree, I’ll walk, and you’ll never see either of them.”
Joss scoffed, but Kallista held up a hand. “You’re pushy, but I’ll agree,” she said.
“It saves me the trouble and delay of finding another solution. But you better hold up your end of the deal.”
I nodded, looking every bit the broken, helpless woman they thought I was. But inside?
I was grinning. Because they had no idea what was coming. The next few months were a game of patience.
Kallista bought me a three-bedroom house in a quiet neighborhood. She and Joss didn’t even look at it, or meet the agent until the day we signed the papers. I breathed a sigh of relief as we left the realtor’s office that day.
Step one was complete, and they were still clueless. I updated them on doctor’s appointments and let Kallista feel my belly when she visited, cooing about “her” baby. I told her I was struggling over choosing which baby to keep.
It was all a play for time while I prepared the final blow. I went into labor on a Tuesday night. I texted Kallista when I left for the hospital, but made sure the nurses knew I didn’t want her or Joss in the delivery room.
I heard them complaining outside at one point, but the contractions were coming hard and fast by then and I didn’t make out what they were saying. Six hours later, my babies arrived. Two perfect girls with wisps of dark hair and lungs that worked just fine.
The nurse smiled. “Want me to tell your husband and your… friend?”
“Tell them the babies are fine, but I need three days,” I said, holding my daughters. The nurse looked confused but nodded.
I named the girls Arden and Briar. I memorized their faces, their cries, and the feel of their tiny fingers clasped around mine. And I finalized my plan.
I took the babies home on the second day. On the third day, I called Kallista. “I’m ready to talk.”
She and Joss showed up within an hour.
Kallista was practically bouncing with excitement, Joss trailing behind her like a shadow. “So,” she cooed, walking into my house. “Which one is mine?”
I took a deep breath, holding one baby in each arm.
“Neither.”
Her smile froze. “Excuse me?”
I stood up slowly. My body ached, but my voice was strong.
“I’m not giving you my child, Kallista. Either of them.”
Joss groaned. “Oh, don’t start this dramatic nonsense—”
“You two thought you could buy a baby from me?
Like I was some desperate idiot? Well, newsflash: I’m not.”
“Then I’m kicking you out of this house,” Kallista snarled. “You can live on the street for all I care!”
I smiled.
“You can’t do that. This house is in my name.”
Kallista’s face drained of color. “What?
No, that’s impossible! Joss, tell her!”
Joss looked just as confused. “We signed the papers together!”
“Yeah.
And you both signed it over to me completely. You were too busy gloating to notice. My name’s the only one on the deed.”
Kallista stumbled back like I’d slapped her.
“You conniving little—”
“Oh, and one more thing,” I added, gently rocking Arden as she fussed. “I went ahead and told a few people about how Joss cheated on his pregnant wife, and how he and his mistress tried to buy his child.”
I nodded toward my phone on the coffee table. “Feel free to check social media.
I posted everything last night. The messages. The pictures.
Your sick baby deal. It’s all there. I tagged your company too, Kallista, and your investors.
Even those charity boards you sit on.”
Kallista lunged for my phone. Her face went from pale to gray as she scrolled. “As you can see, they find your behavior very interesting.”
Kallista screamed, a sound of pure rage and desperation.
Joss grabbed the phone from her, his face white as paper. “You—you ruined us!”
“No. You ruined yourselves.”
Joss lost his job.
Trying to sell your child didn’t sit well with his company’s “family values” image. Kallista wasn’t just fired: she made front-page news for all the wrong reasons and her social and business circles shut her out. And me?
I rocked my girls to sleep each night in our beautiful home, content in the knowledge that I didn’t just get revenge. I won.
