I thought I knew my house—every creak, every hum. I didn’t know my pregnant daughter had been sleeping on a thin air mattress in the hallway.
Linda, my second wife, shut the guest room door and told her it was full. It wasn’t. That night, I tucked a blanket over Emily’s belly and whispered, “I’m sorry.” By morning, I’d bought boxes, tied a ribbon around them, and handed them to Linda. “You have three days,” I said. “This isn’t your home anymore.” I chose my daughter. I chose love. Now, the guest room is hers again. The crib waits. And this house—our house—feels like a place where family lives. Not the kind you marry into. The kind you fight for.