I’m Marie, and I thought I knew what love was—until the day I gave birth to our daughter, Rosalinda. My husband, Patrick, who once whispered to my belly every night, walked out of the delivery room just before she was born. When he returned, he looked at our daughter and coldly said, “I won’t raise another man’s child. I want a DNA test.” I was too shocked to cry.
Patrick had never been the jealous type—until now. He accused me of cheating with his best friend Raymond because Rosalinda had light eyes and hair. His accusations didn’t stop there. His mother posted online that I’d betrayed him, that the baby wasn’t his, and praised Patrick for “standing his ground.” I felt like I was in a nightmare, publicly humiliated and abandoned.
I agreed to the DNA test. Not to prove myself—but to shut them up. And while waiting for results, I leaned on my family. They brought me home from the hospital with love, support, and silence filled with understanding. Patrick refused to see our daughter, demanding “proof” before even holding her.
When the results came back—confirming what I always knew—I delivered them myself to his family’s home. I also brought divorce papers. “You’re the father,” I told Patrick, “but you’ll never be my husband again.” I told his mother she owed me a public apology or I’d see her in court.
Patrick begged later. I didn’t answer. I sent him a screenshot of his own words: “I’m not losing a friendship over a woman.”
Guess what, Patrick? You lost a family.