“Help? You call this… help?”
“We had an agreement,” Mike said quickly. “A gentleman’s agreement. No one would ever know. I wouldn’t be involved. It would just be… biology. He’d be the dad in every way that mattered.”
Lindsay stared at him like he had started speaking another language.
“A gentleman’s agreement? About another woman’s body?” she gasped.
Mike’s voice cracked. “I thought I was saving your marriage. I thought I was… giving you a gift.”
“A gentleman’s agreement?”
“You both decided,” Lindsay said quietly, “that we didn’t deserve the truth.”
Lindsay’s phone buzzed. Greg’s name flashed. She turned the screen toward us, answered, then put it on speaker.
“Don’t call my house again,” she said, voice flat, and ended it.
Minutes later, I called the police. Not because I wanted Greg punished… I did. But it was more than that, because what he did wasn’t just a betrayal. It was fraud, consent forgery, and a medical violation.
And Tiffany — she deserved the truth more than he deserved my silence.
Minutes later, I called the police.
***
Later, I watched Greg move around his suitcase. “Sue.”
I didn’t step toward him. I didn’t reach for something I’d already learned was gone.
“No. We’re done here.”
He swallowed hard. “I can fix this.”
“No,” I said. “You can answer questions at the station. You can talk to your mother at her house. But not here. Not in my home.”
“I can fix this.”
“You’re leaving me?”
“No, I’m kicking you out. I’m staying here with my daughter. She needs stability, not half-truths.”
I heard a neighbor’s car door slam outside and knew that was it — that was the moment I stopped pretending we were fine.
Greg didn’t argue. He called his mother on speaker as he zipped the suitcase.
“Mom,” he said, voice cracking, “I messed up.”
Her silence filled our home.
“No, I’m kicking you out. I’m staying here with my daughter.”
That afternoon, I took Tiffany to the police station. Greg sat across from us in the interview room, eyes red, hands clasped. The officer’s voice was calm but cutting.
“Did you submit another man’s DNA to the clinic?”
“Did you forge your wife’s consent?”
Greg nodded. Lindsay was there too, arms folded, jaw tight. She didn’t say a word. She just watched.
When our eyes met, she nodded once. Not approval. Not forgiveness. Just solidarity.
She didn’t say a word. She just watched.
Tiffany hugged me tightly before bed. “I just want things to be normal again, Mom.”
“Me too. We’ll make a new normal, hon.”
“Is he still my Dad?”
“He’s the man who raised you. That won’t change, honey. But how we move forward? We’ll decide that together.”
She nodded like it made perfect sense.
“Is he still my Dad?”
Greg’s calls have been brief. He doesn’t ask to come home, and I don’t give him the chance to do so.
I’m just… done.
***
Later that week, Lindsay came over. She brought cupcakes and a paint-by-numbers kit.
Tiffany sat cross-legged on the living room floor, opening the box. “Are you mad at Uncle Mike?”
Lindsay didn’t hesitate. She lowered herself onto the floor beside her. “I’m mad that grown-ups lied to us. I’m mad that people made selfish choices.”
Greg’s calls have been brief.
Tiffany’s hands slowed. “But you’re not mad at me?”
“Never at you. Not even a little, Tiff. I’m not mad at your mommy either.”
I stood in the doorway, holding a dish towel I didn’t need, watching my daughter’s shoulders relax.
“You two hungry?” I asked. “I was going to make tacos.”
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