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He Called Her a Pitiful Servant and Left for Another. But When He Returned, an Unexpected Shock Awaited Him.

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He called her a wretched servant and walked away. But when he returned, he got an unexpected surprise.

You see, he sneered at her as a “miserable maid” and left her for another. Yet when he came back, he faced a reaction he never saw coming.

Katherine had always heard the same words from her grandmother and mother: “In this family, women never have luck in love.” Her great-grandmother was widowed at twenty-two, her grandmother lost her husband in the factory, and her mother was left alone with a baby before Katherine even turned three. She didnt believe in curses, but deep down, she feared her love would end in heartbreak too. Still, she dreameddespite herselfof a home, a husband, children warmth.

Her future husband, Richard, worked in the same factory where she packed boxes. He was in another department, but they ate lunch in the same canteen. That was how they fell in love. Everything moved fasta few dates, a proposal, marriage. Richard moved into her two-bedroom flat, inherited from her grandmother. Her mother had already passed. At first, life was peaceful: their first child came, then the second. Katherine did her bestcooking, cleaning, raising the kids. Richard worked, brought home the money, but came home less and less, and their conversations grew scarce.

When he started returning late from work, exhausted, with strange perfume on his shirt, she knew. She never asked, afraid of being left alone with two children. But one day, she cracked.

“Think of the kids, please. Im begging you.”

He stayed silent. Just a cold stare. No explanations. No shouting. The next morning, she served him breakfast, and he didnt touch it.

“Youre only good for being a maid,” he said, full of contempt.

A week later, he left. Packed his bags and shut the door.

“Dont leave us, please!” she cried down the hallway. “The kids need their father!”

“Youre a wretched servant,” he repeated, walking out. The boys heard. The two of them sat on the sofa holding hands, confusedwhat had they done wrong? Why had their father abandoned them?

Katherine refused to crumble. She lived for them. Worked as a cleaner, scrubbed staircases, hauled buckets, taught her sons to read, and hand-washed clothes when the machine broke. The boys grew up fast, helping where they could. She forgot herself, her dreams. But fate has a way of surprising you.

One day in the supermarket, she dropped a box of tea. A man picked it up and smiled.

“Need help with your bags?”

“Not necessary,” she muttered, distracted.

“Ill help anyway,” he said, already lifting her shopping.

His name was John. He started showing up at the shop every day, then walking her home, until one day he appeared at her building to help with the cleaning. The boys were wary, but he was kind, patient. At their first dinner together, he brought cake and white roses. When the eldest teased,

“Did you play basketball?”

He laughed.

“Back in school, yeah. Long time ago.”

Later, he admitted,

“I had an accident. I speak slowly, move with difficulty. My wife left me. If you dont want me around, Ill understand.”

“If the boys like you, you stay,” Katherine said.

He proposed. And he asked to speak to the boys.

“I want to be a real father to you.”

That night, she explained everything to her sons. They hugged her.

“Our dad left and forgot about us,” the youngest said. “Would be nice to have one who stayed.”

And so, John became family. He taught the boys to kick a football, helped with homework, fixed shelves, laughed with them. The house filled with life. Years passed. The boys became men. Thomas fell in love and went to John for advice. Then, the doorbell rang.

At the door stood Richard.

“I was a fool. Take me back. Lets start over”

“Get lost,” Thomas cut in.

“Is that how you speak to your father?!” Richard shouted.

“Dont talk to my son like that,” John said firmly.

“We dont need you,” the younger one added. “Weve already got a dad.”

They shut the door. For good.

Katherine stood there, looking at the three of themher protectors, her family, built with blood, sweat, and tears. And at last she was happy.

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