Just weeks before my wedding, my mother called with shocking news: she had secretly eloped—with my fiancé’s father, Eric. Then she demanded I cancel my wedding because it would be “inappropriate.” She thought I’d back down, but I refused.
I was 25, in love with David, and finally ready to build the life I’d dreamed of. My parents had divorced when I was ten, after my mom’s affair, so stability always felt fragile. David, patient and steady, was the opposite of my chaotic upbringing. We’d been together three years, engaged for over a year, and I had recently found out I was pregnant. I was planning to share the news soon—before my mom turned everything upside down.
At a family dinner weeks earlier, I’d invited my divorced parents, David’s widowed father, and my stepmom. The night had been tense but civil. What I didn’t know was that my mother and Eric had started secretly dating after that evening. When she revealed they’d married in Vegas, I was stunned. Then she went further, insisting that since we were now “step-siblings,” David and I couldn’t marry.
When I refused, she lashed out and began sabotaging my wedding. She called the venue, the florist, and even the caterer to cancel everything behind my back. David was furious. He confronted Eric, who claimed he had no issue with our marriage, but offered no apology for my mom’s behavior. That was the final straw.
Together, David and I packed up, left the state, and quietly married in a courthouse with only my dad and best friend present. It wasn’t the big wedding I’d planned, but it was ours.
Months later, my mom divorced Eric. She still tries to reach out, demanding to know her grandchild, but I’ve closed that door. Some people don’t earn a place in your life just because of blood.