Stories: We need a paternity test

When my daughter was born, she looked nothing like us.

Soft blonde hair, bright blue eyes — a tiny porcelain doll. I fell in love instantly. My husband, Tom, did not.

Within hours of meeting her, he grew quiet. By the next day, he was furious.

“We need a paternity test,” he snapped. “This isn’t possible.”

I was still bleeding, exhausted, and terrified, yet he packed a bag and went to stay with his parents “to clear his head.” His mother called me that night, cold and cutting.

“If that baby isn’t my son’s, I’ll make sure you get nothing in the divorce. I’ll ruin you.”

I hung up shaking.

The next weeks were lonely. I fed my daughter at 3 a.m., cried into pillows, and tried to ignore Tom’s silence. He only texted once: “Results soon.”

Yesterday, they came.

Tom arrived at my apartment pale, holding the envelope like it might burn him. He read the first line aloud — then stopped.

His hands trembled. His face collapsed.

He looked up at me in disbelief. “She… she is mine.”

I didn’t smile.

Instead, I asked calmly, “Do you know why she’s blonde and blue-eyed?”

He shook his head.

I handed him a framed photo from my hallway — his grandmother at 20. Same pale hair. Same eyes.

And another photo from his father’s side — a great-uncle who looked like my baby’s twin.

Recessive genes. The explanation was simple. His distrust had not been.

Tom sat on my couch and sobbed for the first time since our daughter was born. He apologized — for leaving, for doubting me, for letting his mother threaten me.

I didn’t forgive him right away.

That evening, I went to his parents’ house alone.

His mother opened the door smug, ready for a fight.

I placed the paternity report on the table.

Her face drained of color.

Then I said quietly, “You will never speak to me that way again. You will never threaten me again. And if you want a relationship with your granddaughter, you will apologize — properly.”

She did.

Two days later, Tom moved back in. Slowly, he earned my trust again — night feedings, therapy, and real accountability.

A month later, at our daughter’s naming ceremony, Tom held her tightly and whispered, “I’m so lucky she’s mine.”

I smiled — not because he was redeemed, but because I had kept my power.

And that was the ending I deserved.

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