I felt my chest tighten as my mom’s words echoed in the room. “You have to give her up because…” she paused, her eyes locked on the baby, “…because this isn’t what you think it is.” My heart dropped instantly. Nothing made sense. I looked at my daughter, peacefully sleeping, completely unaware that something was suddenly very wrong.
“What are you talking about?” I asked, my voice shaking. My husband stepped closer, just as confused. My mom took a deep breath, like she was trying to find the strength to say something she never imagined she would. “Look at her,” she said softly. “Really look.” At first, I didn’t understand. She looked like a newborn—tiny, perfect, ours. But then my mom pointed to something small, something I hadn’t paid attention to before.
“There’s a mark,” she whispered. “A birthmark… exactly like the one your grandmother had. And like the one… I had removed years ago.” The room went silent. My mind started racing. That mark wasn’t something random—it was something deeply tied to our family. Something that couldn’t just appear without reason.
“What are you saying?” my husband asked. My mom looked at me, tears forming in her eyes. “I’m saying something went wrong… or something wasn’t what we were told.” The words hit hard. After everything—the tests, the legal process, the planning—this wasn’t supposed to happen. Everything had been controlled, verified, checked.
I picked up my daughter, holding her close, trying to make sense of it all. But one thing became clear in that moment—no matter what explanation came next, no matter what truth we were about to uncover, she was already mine. Not just by plan, not just by process… but by something deeper I couldn’t explain.