When our son was born, I thought I was being cautious, responsible even. A small seed of doubt — one I never admitted aloud — kept growing until I finally demanded a paternity test.
My wife didn’t cry or argue; she simply looked at me with a stunned expression and quietly asked, “And what if you’re wrong?” I answered with certainty I mistook for strength: “If he isn’t mine, I’m leaving.” I mistook her silence for guilt and her attempt to smile through hurt as arrogance. When the results came back saying I wasn’t the father, I believed them without question. I walked out. Papers, lawyers, final words — and I convinced myself I was doing the right thing.