Daniel burst through the hospital doors, breathless and shaking, expecting the worst. A nurse led him to the maternity ward, where a doctor explained that an emergency cesarean section had been necessary, but both babies were alive and recovering. Relief washed over him for only a moment before he asked to see me. The doctor quietly shook his head. “She’s awake,” he said, “but she has made it very clear she doesn’t want visitors.”
Instead, my attorney stepped into the hallway holding a sealed envelope. Inside were temporary custody papers, a restraining request based on documented emotional abuse, and copies of every message Daniel had exchanged with Lauren. “Mrs. Collins prepared these before she went into labor,” the attorney said. “She wanted everything handled, no matter what happened today.” Daniel stood speechless as the weight of his own choices settled over him.
The next morning, I finally agreed to meet him—but only through the nursery window. I held Ethan while a nurse cradled Grace beside me. Daniel pressed his hand against the glass, tears streaming down his face as he whispered apologies I could no longer believe. I looked at him calmly and said, “These children will always know who their father is. But they will also know why their mother chose peace instead of pain.”
Months later, the divorce was finalized, and I brought my twins home to a quiet little house filled with laughter instead of lies. Daniel tried for years to rebuild what he had destroyed, but trust never returned. As I rocked my son and daughter to sleep one evening, I realized the greatest heartbreak of his life wasn’t losing our marriage—it was watching the family he’d dreamed of grow up happily without him because he had traded forever for something temporary