A Nairobi woman's decade-long battle with infertility takes a shocking twist when she discovers their house help hiding a positive pregnancy test — but the truth behind it will leave you speechless.
Sharon Wanjiku and her husband Kevin have been trying to conceive for ten years, visiting every fertility clinic from Kenyatta National Hospital to private facilities in Westlands. When Sharon spots their 22-year-old house help, Mary, acting suspiciously in their Karen home bathroom, she follows her instincts and discovers a positive pregnancy test tucked behind cleaning supplies.
The discovery sends Sharon into a tailspin of rage and betrayal. "I thought Kevin had been sleeping with our help while I suffered through countless hospital visits and expensive treatments," Sharon tells us. Like many Kenyan couples, they had spent their savings on fertility treatments, even taking loans and selling their car to fund IVF procedures that never worked.
Sharon confronts Kevin in a heated argument that nearly destroys their marriage. She accuses him of getting their house help pregnant while she remained barren after years of trying. The confrontation becomes so intense that neighbors in their estate hear the shouting, and Sharon threatens to send Mary back to her rural home in Meru immediately.
But Mary breaks down and reveals the truth that changes everything. The pregnancy test belongs to Sharon herself — Mary had been secretly monitoring her employer's menstrual cycle and suspected Sharon might be pregnant before she even knew it. Mary had bought the test with her own money from a nearby chemist and was planning to surprise Sharon with the good news.
The revelation hits Sharon like a matatu on Thika Road. After a decade of negative tests and dashed hopes, she finally carries the child she has prayed for at every church service and hospital visit. Kevin breaks down in tears, and the couple realizes how infertility had poisoned their ability to trust and communicate with each other.
Sharon and Kevin now celebrate their miracle pregnancy, but the incident exposes how desperation and years of disappointment can drive even the strongest couples to the brink of destruction. How many other Kenyan families are silently struggling with infertility while society pressures them about when the next child is coming?