The doctor’s face drained of color so fast I thought she might collapse before I did. Then she locked the ultrasound room door, lowered her voice, and said, “Mara, you need to leave now. Get a divorce.”
I let out a sharp, frightened laugh. “Why?”
Dr. Elena Voss didn’t answer. She turned the monitor toward me, tapped the screen with a shaking finger, and said, “No time to explain. You’ll understand when you see this.”
At forty-five, I had spent years being labeled barren—first in whispers, then in jokes, then accidentally in my husband’s family group chat. My husband, Victor, always made it up with flowers and silence. His mother called me “poor Mara” as if infertility were my full identity.
But that morning, in that dim room, I heard my baby’s heartbeat for the first time.
Then I noticed the name on the medical file open beside my ultrasound.
Not mine.
“Patient: Lila Harrow,” I read.
The date was from two weeks earlier. The notes were brief, clinical, and toxic.
Six weeks pregnant. Genetic screening requested. Paternity confirmation pending: Victor Lang.
The room spun.
Lila was my twenty-eight-year-old assistant. My kind, smiling assistant who brought me tea, called me “inspiring,” and once cried in my office because she “wanted a career like mine.”
My hand drifted to my stomach.
Dr. Voss swallowed. “She came here using your insurance card.”
“What?”
“She said she was your surrogate.”
Ice spread through my veins.
Elena clicked another file. A consent form appeared. My signature was at the bottom—neat, elegant.
Forged.
“They’re trying to create a medical paper trail,” she whispered. “If you’re pregnant, they didn’t expect it. If they claim confusion, custody, fraud—Mara, I don’t know the full plan, but Victor’s name is on this authorization.”
I stared at the fake signature.