His reasoning? Our daughter has darker hair than him (he has brown hair; I’m white-blonde).
I was a little confused since she hardly had any hair, and it just felt like he was accusing me of infidelity! I actually thought he was joking, but he kept saying, “Her hair is really dark.”
He even went as far as to say, “If she weren’t mine biologically, she’d still be my girl.”
That statement just really upset me, but I agreed to the test.
Little did I know that it would just be the beginning of an inevitable catastrophe.
The test showed that he was not the father.
I felt my stomach drop. I was so sure there was some mistake. I had never been with anyone else, not even once. I immediately called the lab, demanding answers, but they confirmed the results.
My husband, Daniel, just sat there, holding the papers, his face pale. “I knew it,” he whispered. “I knew something was off.”
I felt like I was in a nightmare. “Daniel, I have never cheated on you! This has to be a mistake!”
He shook his head, laughing bitterly. “The science doesn’t lie, right?” He stood up, running a hand through his hair. “You know what? Maybe this is a blessing. Now I can leave with a clear conscience.”
I gasped. “You’re just going to leave? We have a three-week-old baby!”
“Not my baby, remember?” he snapped, grabbing his coat. “Get a lawyer. I want a divorce.”
And just like that, he was gone.
I spent the next few days in a daze, crying, staring at my daughter, trying to make sense of something that didn’t. There was no way Daniel wasn’t the father. I hadn’t been with anyone else.
That’s when I got an idea. What if the hospital had made a mistake?
I took my daughter back to the hospital where she was born, demanding they check their records. At first, they brushed me off, but I wouldn’t leave. Finally, after hours of persistence, they agreed to review their records.
The next day, I got a call that shattered my world even further.
“Ma’am,” the nurse said cautiously. “There was a mix-up. We need you to come in immediately.”
I rushed to the hospital, clutching my baby tightly, feeling sick to my stomach. When I got there, they sat me down and explained that my biological daughter had been accidentally switched with another baby in the nursery.
My knees went weak. “So… this isn’t my daughter?” I whispered, looking down at the tiny, innocent face that I had kissed every night for the past three weeks.
“Your biological daughter is with another family,” the doctor admitted. “We’ve contacted them as well. They are on their way.”
Panic set in. I had bonded with this child. She was mine in every way that mattered. The thought of handing her over felt like someone was reaching into my chest and ripping out my heart. But at the same time… my real baby was out there. A baby I had never held.