Christmas morning should have been loud and joyful. Instead, it stopped cold in a single sentence.
My five-year-old tore into a gift, froze, then screamed with delight, “YES! The other mom kept her promise! I knew she would!”
The room went silent.
I laughed automatically, the way you do when your brain hasn’t caught up yet. “The… other mom?”
Simon nodded, hugging the box to his chest. Inside was an expensive collector model car—one we had very deliberately decided not to buy. Too pricey. Too grown-up. Not appropriate for a five-year-old.
I turned toward my husband.
Mike wasn’t smiling. His face had gone completely pale. He wouldn’t look at me.
My heart began to pound.
“Who is the other mom?” I asked, keeping my voice calm for Simon’s sake.
He hesitated, sensing the shift. “Dad knows her,” he said. “She comes sometimes. She told me not to worry.”
Not to worry.
Those words echoed in my head like an alarm.
“She said we’d go on a trip soon,” Simon added casually. “Me, her, and Daddy. You’ll have to work, Mommy.”
That was when Mike finally spoke. “Let’s… let’s talk in the kitchen.”
The second the door closed, I turned on him.
“Start talking. Now.”
“It’s Megan,” he said, voice cracking.
“The babysitter?”
He nodded.
The same babysitter we’d fired months earlier because he claimed she was acting inappropriately around him. The one he said made him uncomfortable.
“So you’re having an affair with her?” I demanded.
“No! God, no. I swear. I didn’t cheat. But I messed up. Badly.”
He told me everything.
After we fired her, Megan had messaged him. Apologized. Said she didn’t mean to make him uncomfortable. Said she missed Simon. Asked if she could stop by just once to say hi.
He didn’t tell me. He thought I’d say no. Thought I’d accuse him of being naïve.
He let her come over.
Once turned into many times. Always when I was at work. Always framed as harmless.
Then one day, he overheard her telling Simon to call her his “other mom.” Telling him to keep their visits secret. Promising him things. Making plans.
He said he felt sick. Told her to stop coming. Told her never to contact him again.
Then he looked at the gift under the tree and whispered, “I didn’t put that there.”
My blood ran cold.
That meant she’d been in our house without us knowing. While we slept. While our son was home.
Before I could say anything else, Simon appeared in the doorway. His face was pale.
“Mom… is the other mom bad?”
I knelt in front of him, my hands shaking. “She’s confused, sweetheart.”
He frowned. “She came to see me at school. She asked me for a key so she could surprise us for Christmas dinner.”
The key.
That’s how she got in.
I kissed his forehead and sent him back to the living room, then turned to Mike.
“Screenshot everything she ever sent you,” I said. “Then call the police.”
He stared at me. “You’re serious?”
“She was in our house. She manipulated our child. She planned something involving food. I am not letting this sit.”
I drove to her apartment while the police were on the way.
When she opened the door, I understood everything.
She was wearing an apron. Behind her, the kitchen counter was lined with foil-covered dishes like a catered feast.
She smiled at me like I was the intruder.
“I was just about to bring dinner over,” she said sweetly. “You weren’t supposed to be home.”
Then her face hardened. “Mike and I are in love. Simon asked me to be his other mom. I was just helping the transition.”
My stomach dropped.
Before she could step closer, two police officers appeared at the end of the hall. She lunged toward me anyway, screaming that I was ruining her family.
They arrested her on the spot.
She was charged with breaking and entering, harassment, and child endangerment. The court ordered mandatory psychiatric treatment and a restraining order that will last years.
Christmas dinner went into the trash. So did every illusion I had about safety.
Mike and I separated not long after. Trust doesn’t survive something like that.
Simon is okay. We’re in therapy. He understands now that there was never another mom—just an adult who crossed lines and a father who failed to protect him in time.
Sometimes I still think about that moment under the tree. The joy on my son’s face. The way it shattered everything in seconds.
If there’s one thing I learned, it’s this: when something feels off, it usually is. And when someone asks your child to keep secrets from you, that is never harmless.
Not ever.