She called me from an unknown number just after sunset and asked to meet. I said yes before I had time to think. I imagined drama, a slap, a scene. Instead, it was a coffee shop in daylight—with her kids. Her name was Maysa. She wasn’t angry, just hollow. Her teenage daughter folded her arms like someone already fluent in disappointment. “You’re not the first,” she said. Maysa added, “But you’re the first to get pregnant.”
I was stunned. Karam had told me his marriage was over “in everything but paperwork.” I wanted to believe him—especially once the test turned positive. Maysa explained that he’d done this before, leaving wreckage behind each time. She wasn’t there to beg me to walk away, only to show me who else was hurt. When we left, her parting words—“Your baby doesn’t have to carry his sins”—split me open.
For months I held onto lies, until the cracks showed too clearly. Secret trips, missed nights, excuses that unraveled. When I finally ended things, he called me dramatic. But I didn’t shout; I didn’t throw anything. I told him it was over. Later, his daughter messaged me: “Thank you for not falling for it again.” It reminded me that walking away was not weakness—it was protection.
In time, I rebuilt. I moved cities, found new support, and welcomed my son, Sami. I left Karam off the birth certificate. Maysa eventually filed for divorce, telling me she too felt free. Sami turned one with frosting on his nose and friends laughing in the park. Looking at him, I realized he wasn’t a mistake—he was my beginning. The truth I learned the hard way: love doesn’t hide, and peace does come, even if it takes time.