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A Woman Called and Said: “I Have a Child with Your Husband

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Hey love, you wont believe the call I got today. My phone rang an unknown number and I answered straight away, even though my hands were still wet from the dishes.

Good afternoon, is this Mrs. Clarke? asked a womans voice, young and calm, with a faint accent from beyond the western border.

Yes, thats me, I said.

Please dont hang up this is important. I have a child with your husband.

For a split second I thought Id misheard. Then I wondered if it was a joke. In the next moment my whole body went cold as ice. I braced myself against the countertop so I wouldnt collapse.

What did you say? I whispered.

Its Mark the lorry driver. He runs routes down to Germany. Weve been seeing each other for over a year. I thought he was single.

She spoke slowly, as if shed rehearsed this for ages. Every word hit like a hammer. My husband the same one whod texted me last night, Ill be late, the unload is taking forever apparently had a second family.

The babys seven months old, the other woman continued. Im not after money. I just want you to know.

My phone slipped from my grasp. The crash sounded like breaking glass. I stared at the kitchen, at the photo of us on the fridge, and felt my whole life shatter in an instant.

I cant remember how long I sat on the floor, propped against the cupboard. Time seemed to stop. The phrase I have a child with your husband kept looping in my head, as if repeating it could erase its meaning. Each repetition hurt a little more.

That evening Mark called, his voice as steady as ever.

Everythings sorted, Ill be back tomorrow. Need me to bring anything? he asked, like he was chatting to a mate.

I froze. For a heartbeat I wanted to say, Yes, bring the truth. Instead I whispered, Come over. We need to talk.

He turned up the next day. The lorry pulled up outside the block and I watched from my window as he got out tired, oblivious that this house was no longer his home. He walked in, hugged me on instinct. I pushed him away.

A woman from Germany called me, I said. She said she has a child with you.

His face went pale, the colour draining right out. He didnt try to deny it. He sat down, stared at the floor for a few seconds, then began.

I never wanted you to find out like this. It was a mistake. Everything got out of hand. His voice cracked. It started as a simple friendship coffee, a chat on the parking lot. Sometimes a man just needs someone to listen.

And then you got her pregnant, I snapped. Thats enough.

He fell silent. He had no defence left.

She didnt know I was married, he added after a pause. When she got pregnant I told her Id sort things out get a loan, help out. But I couldnt. I didnt know how to explain it to you.

Anger turned to coldness. I looked at him and felt only emptiness. The man Id shared over twenty years with now seemed like a figure behind glass.

Why? I finally asked. We had everything.

Exactly because of that, he whispered. We fell into routine, we lost us.

Thats when I realised cheating isnt always born from passion. Sometimes it creeps in from silence, from years of unspoken words. It still hurts just as much.

He left the kitchen, leaving behind the scent of cold air and diesel. The door shut, and I collapsed into a chair. The house was dead quiet. His mug sat on the table, still warm. For a moment I wanted to smash it, to destroy every reminder of him, but I only nudged it aside.

He didnt call the next day, nor the one after. Then a text appeared: I need to think. Please dont lock the door. I didnt reply.

Later that night I opened my laptop and found her profile a younger woman, ordinary, holding a baby boy with dark eyes that were almost identical to Marks. My heart clenched.

I couldnt look away. It hit me then that her pain was different from mine, but still real. Shed been living a lie too, a part of the same story Mark wrote without our consent.

I shut the laptop, tears already gone. All that was left was a deep, boneweary fatigue, as if all those years had collapsed on me at once.

Two weeks passed. The house was too quiet, the bed too wide. I kept waiting for his call, his knock, that familiar look that always melted any anger. He never showed up. Instead a plain envelope arrived, his handwriting crooked, as if written in a rush.

I’m not asking for forgiveness, it began. I just want you to know I never planned this. I never meant to lead a double life. It happened. Im ashamed I didnt have the courage to tell you the truth. The child is mine. Ill support them, but I wont intrude on their lives. Id like to come back if youll let me.

I read that letter a few times. Every sentence sounded different sometimes remorse, sometimes an excuse. I cant say whether the child is mine or I want to come back hurt more. How do you return to a place you burned yourself?

A few days later he turned up at the door, thinner, with grey streaks at his temples. He looked at me with the same gaze that once made the world feel possible. In his hands was a bag, as if he were ready for anything.

I know I dont deserve you, he said. But I cant live without you.

I didnt answer. I let him in. He sat at the kitchen table, the one where we always had our morning tea. We sat in silence for ages. Finally I asked, And her?

She knows Im back, he replied quietly. She didnt want to hold me back.

Nothing was decided that night. No promises, no clear path just a hollow space hanging between us, unnamed.

Since then we sleep in separate rooms. He still tries, cooking, fixing things he never bothered with before. Im learning to live with the knowledge that some things cant be pieced back together, no matter how hard you try.

When I switch off the lights at night, I think of that little boy with Marks eyes. I wonder if hell ever want to meet his father, and whether I could ever forgive him for that.

Im not sure I can love him anymore, but I do know I cant keep living a lie. And that, painful as it is, feels like the first step toward something real.

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