My husband’s ex sent a birthday gift for our daughter—nothing new. But this time, it was a necklace in an old velvet box. When my daughter showed me the engraving on the back, I felt my stomach lurch.
I stormed into the garage and demanded answers. He stared at the necklace and whispered, “I never thought she’d keep it.”
I froze. My mouth was open, ready to spit fire, but those six words threw me.
Never thought who would keep what? He rubbed his hand over his jaw like he was buying time. The smell of motor oil mixed with the summer heat, making the whole garage feel like a furnace.
I held up the necklace like it was Exhibit A in a courtroom. “Why does this say ‘Forever my little star—Dad’?”
He looked at me with this wounded softness in his eyes, but I didn’t flinch. He swallowed hard.
“Because… I gave that to her daughter. Her first daughter.”
I blinked. “What?”
He sighed.
“Before I met you. Back when I was twenty-three. Her name was Maliya.
We were together a few years, and she got pregnant. We were broke, living in a studio apartment above her uncle’s garage. We fought all the time.
Eventually, she moved back in with her parents in Arizona and… I never saw the baby. I sent that necklace after she was born. It came back in the mail.
I assumed she didn’t want me involved.”
The air between us thickened. I’d known he had a past—who doesn’t?—but not this. A whole child he’d never told me about?
I stepped back. “You have another kid you never told me about?”
He held his hands up. “I didn’t know if I did.
She stopped responding. Changed her number. I convinced myself it didn’t matter.
I met you, we built this life…”
“But it does matter,” I snapped. “Especially now that she’s sending gifts to our daughter.”
He nodded, slow. “Yeah.
I know.”
I turned on my heel and left him standing there. That night, I barely slept. Every creak of the house felt like a question mark.
We’d been married seven years. Had a mortgage, a joint Amazon account, matching pajama sets. But there was this whole other branch of his life I’d never been told about.
I kept thinking about our daughter, Mira. She was only six, and she adored her birthday gift. She kept saying how pretty the necklace was, how “fancy” it felt.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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