The nursery had once been a place of shared joy, painted softly and filled with plans for the future. Now, standing beside the crib where our two-week-old son slept, I felt only certainty that something was wrong. When I demanded a paternity test, Emma’s shock and quiet compliance felt, to me, like confirmation. I told myself I was protecting myself from betrayal.
The test results arrived quickly and decisively. Zero percent probability. I wasn’t the father. I left without listening, filed for divorce, and erased Emma and the child from my life. I told friends I’d done what any reasonable man would do, and for years I believed it.
Three years later, that certainty shattered in a coffee shop. A mutual friend told me the truth: the lab had made a mistake. Emma had never cheated. The child I abandoned was biologically mine. By the time she proved the error, I had blocked her from my life entirely.
A second test confirmed what I had destroyed my family over. My son was mine. The realization came with crushing regret. I tried to apologize, to explain, to make amends, but Emma never responded. She had built a life without me, one she had every right to protect.