After my divorce, I knew I still wanted a baby — but not a husband. I chose sperm donation, convinced I’d know exactly where my child came from.Nine months later, I had Alan, my perfect little boy. For eight years, we lived happily as a family of two — until my mom got sick, and we moved back to my hometown.That’s when the whispers began. Old classmates stared at Alan like they’d seen a ghost.
At the summer festival, I ran into my best friend from before I moved — Jude. He looked at Alan, then at me, his face pale. Alan’s curls, smile, and even the way he stood… were identical to Jude’s childhood photos.“How old is he?” Jude asked, voice tight.
“Eight,” I said, the realization hitting me like a wave. The timing lined up — right after my farewell party, the night Olivia mixed my drinks a little too strong. I’d assumed the insemination the following week had worked… but maybe it hadn’t.Everyone had been staring because they recognized Jude in my son.
We agreed to get a DNA test. If Alan was his, Jude wanted to be in his life. I didn’t know how his wife would take it — or how it would change mine — but I knew one thing: my perfectly planned “single mom” life might never be the same again.Sometimes the biggest surprises aren’t from strangers — they’re from the people you thought you already knew.