When I landed the senior project lead role at our Boston firm, I ducked into the restroom and let the tears fall. They weren’t from joy alone—months of skipped lunches, late-night emails, and endless weekends had finally broken through my armor.
I texted my husband, Marcus. Got it.
Within seconds, his reply popped up: “Celebration tonight. Steak and wine.”
It sounded perfect, though I knew my promotion meant even longer hours. Our laundry pile had begun to resemble a mountain range, and takeout cartons were taking over the kitchen counter. I had stopped wearing makeup just to save time in the evenings.
One Tuesday night, while I reheated a plastic container of Thai curry, Marcus spoke up from the dining table.
“You’re running yourself into the ground, Nora. We need help around here.”
I frowned. “Help?”
“I was thinking of hiring someone. My dad’s coworker’s niece is looking for extra work—she’s tidy, friendly. She could come by during the week.”
It startled me. Marcus came from a family where chores were a woman’s duty; he’d once complimented me on how “classy” I looked vacuuming in heels. Lately, he’d been trying to break that mold, pitching in with dishes and groceries. But hiring someone outright? That was new.
By the following Monday, Sierra arrived. She worked while I was gone, leaving little sticky notes on the fridge:
“Washed the curtains!”
“Oven is spotless, chicken marinating in the fridge.”
For the first time in months, the apartment smelled faintly of citrus, and my shirts appeared in the closet neatly pressed. I started to feel lighter.
Then, the sleepwalking returned.
It had been dormant since college, but one morning I woke to find myself in the hallway with bruised shins. My doctor recommended a sleep journal and—hesitantly—a motion-trigger camera in the bedroom and hallway.
I didn’t tell Marcus. I bought two small cameras over lunch and installed them discreetly.
Three nights in, reviewing the footage over leftover pasta, I caught something unexpected. Marcus came home at noon—a time he was usually on-site at the construction project. Twenty minutes later, Sierra walked in with grocery bags.
They laughed together. He made her tea. She touched his arm; he brushed her hair from her face. Later, they hugged close, familiar.
That evening, I barely heard his chatter over dinner. My mind kept replaying the images. Was this how betrayal began—quiet, casual, in the middle of my own kitchen?
The next day, I told Marcus I had a late meeting, then parked my car a block away and walked home at 1:30 p.m.
Classical music drifted from the speakers—Marcus hated classical music. I stepped into the kitchen. Sierra was chopping vegetables while Marcus leaned nearby, smiling.
“What’s for dinner?” I asked.
Marcus spun around. “Nora? You’re early.”
Sierra’s face blanched. “We… weren’t ready to surprise you yet.”
I followed them into the dining room. The table was dressed in a white cloth I hadn’t seen since our anniversary. Candles, a bouquet of roses, champagne glasses… and in the center, a framed sonogram.
My throat tightened. “What is this?”
“It’s ours,” Sierra said softly.
I stared. Marcus took my hand. “She’s not our maid. She’s our surrogate.”
The room tilted. I remembered last year’s diagnosis—the one that declared natural conception nearly impossible for us. I had shut down, throwing myself into work. One evening, wrapped in a robe with a mug of wine, Marcus had asked, What if we used a surrogate? I’d murmured something like Do whatever you want. I’m too tired to think about it.
Apparently, he had.
He explained how Sierra had done this before, how his father’s coworker had connected them, and how they’d used one of the embryos we’d frozen during our brief attempt at IVF.
“I didn’t want to tell you until it was real,” Marcus said. “Until we knew it was safe. We’re five months along. It’s a boy.”
I gripped the back of a chair. “You should have told me sooner.”
“I was afraid it would hurt you all over again,” he said. “I wanted to give you good news you could actually hold onto.”
Sierra’s voice was gentle. “I’ve been helping with light chores, getting used to your home. Marcus insisted I take it easy.”
I glanced at the bracelet box Marcus now held—silver, with a heart-shaped charm etched with tiny footprints.
“This was supposed to be your dinner gift tonight,” he said quietly.
Tears blurred the roses into red smudges. I was angry, but beneath that anger, something warm stirred—hope. Against every odds, we were going to be parents.
That night, we lit the candles after all. Sierra went home early, promising to return next week. Marcus and I ate ice cream on the couch.
“I’m scared,” I admitted.
“Me too,” he said, “but happy.”
I touched the charm on my wrist. No, I wasn’t carrying him yet. But he was already mine. And maybe—just maybe—this was the start of something beautiful.