My husband and I had been married for seven years.
Seven years of love, of loyalty, of shared dreams—yet we were missing one thing: a child.
My mother-in-law, Margaret, never let it go. She was deeply traditional and firmly believed that if a couple couldn’t conceive, the fault always lay with the woman. Even though she had never once asked me to see a doctor, she had already decided that I was infertile.
“If you can’t give my son a child, he should find another woman,” she would say coldly.
I had grown used to those words.
In front of me, my husband Daniel always played the understanding husband.
“Having a baby is a blessing from God,” he would say gently. “It will happen when the time is right.”
I believed him.
Until I discovered that he had been cheating on me.
THE FIRST SHOCK
The day the pregnancy test showed two lines, I cried like a baby. Seven years of waiting finally paid off. I held my belly tightly, imagining all sorts of things about the little family I was about to have.
But I heard that in the first 3 months of pregnancy, the mother should keep it a secret from family members to avoid bad luck for the child. And I tried to do the same. Part of me also wanted to surprise my husband’s family
After 3 long months of waiting, the day finally came when I announced the good news. I thought happiness had finally arrived.
But that day, Daniel walked into our house with another pregnant woman by his side.
Standing in front of his mother, he said calmly,
“She’s carrying my child.”
The room fell into a deadly silence.
I stood frozen.
Margaret’s shock quickly turned into joy. She rushed over, pulled the woman to sit beside her, her eyes filled with excitement.
“How far along are you?” she asked.
“Eight weeks,” the woman answered softly.
My voice trembled.
“Mom… I’m pregnant too.”
Margaret turned to me, her face instantly cold.
“What? Are you kidding? Who knows if it’s even real.”
THE PRENATAL DNA TEST
The next day, Margaret delivered her verdict:
“Both of you will take a prenatal DNA test. This family does not raise children of unknown blood.”
My heart shattered.
The other woman lowered her head, her hands shaking.
On the day of the test, I didn’t cry. I felt like my heart had already turned to stone.
Three days later, the results arrived.
Margaret opened the envelopes herself.
The first result—mine.
She skimmed it quickly, her expression unchanged.
Then she opened the second envelope—the mistress’s result.
The moment she read the first line, her face turned pale.
“No… this can’t be…”
Daniel panicked.
“Mom, what does it say?”
Her hands trembled as she slammed the paper onto the table.
“The child she’s carrying… is not related to our family by blood!”
The entire house went silent.
The woman collapsed in tears.
Daniel staggered backward, whispering,
“That’s impossible…”
But the truth was undeniable.
THE AWAKENING
Margaret slowly turned to look at me, regret filling her eyes.
“So… all these years… I blamed the wrong person.”
Daniel dropped to his knees in front of me.
“I was wrong… please forgive me… for the baby…”
I looked at them—the two people who had caused me seven years of humiliation and heartbreak. I felt no anger anymore. Only disgust and emptiness.
Seven years of being doubted.
Seven years of silent suffering.
Seven years of trusting the wrong man.
THE FINAL DECISION
I signed the divorce papers that very day.
Margaret cried and grabbed my hand.
“Stay for my grandson… for this family…”
Daniel begged on his knees.
“I swear I’ll make it up to you…”
I slowly shook my head.
“This family… stopped being mine a long time ago.”
I walked out with a single suitcase—and the child growing quietly inside me.
EPILOGUE
Years later, I live in another city. I have a stable job, a peaceful life, and a kind, healthy little boy.
As for my former husband’s family—I heard Daniel divorced that woman and now lives in regret. Margaret grew old and frail, with no one truly by her side.
But none of that matters to me anymore.
Because I finally understood one thing:
Sometimes, leaving is the only way to truly live.

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