Stephen had been gone for seven hours when Layla told me about the box. We were curled on the couch after mac and cheese, the glow of cartoons filling the room. When I asked if she wanted to play hide-and-seek, she hesitated. “Daddy got mad last time,” she said quietly. My heart sank. Stephen, angry? That didn’t sound like the man who lectured me about not raising voices.
Layla told me she’d hidden in the garage and found a box. “Just paper,” she shrugged. But Stephen had shouted, taken it away, and warned her never to go in there again. That night, once she was asleep, I stood in the garage, surrounded by dusty boxes. One in the corner stood out—newer tape, barely touched. Inside, beneath baby clothes and a stuffed bear, was a manila folder. I opened it.
A paternity test.
Stephen: 0% probability of paternity.
He knew.
Five years, he had carried that knowledge. Never said a word. Still kissed Layla’s scraped knees, read bedtime stories, and loved her like his own. My mistake had stayed buried—until now. That night with Ethan was one moment, one lapse. I never thought it would matter.
When Stephen returned, his love for Layla was unchanged. Later, in the kitchen, he reached for his coffee and said softly, “I used to wonder if I’d regret staying. But I don’t. Not for a second.” Then he smiled.
I turned away, tears in my eyes. I chose silence.
Some truths… maybe they’re better left unspoken.