I signed the divorce papers quickly, as if it were nothing. Just a few days later, I moved in with Vanessa completely. I left Grace—the woman I called my wife for years—without any explanation to my family or neighbors. Vanessa was different.
She was always happy, always rubbing her belly, always talking about our future child. I showed her off to my parents. My mother was overjoyed. “Finally, there will be an heir,” she said while holding Vanessa‘s hand.
My resolve grew stronger. I thought I had proven everything—that I was a man, that I was whole, that Grace was the one with the problem.
We decided to get married immediately. The wedding was lavish. Full of guests. Full of praise. Vanessa wore a white dress, and I was full of pride.
Until the wedding night arrived. Inside the room, while Vanessa was getting ready, I noticed the shape of her belly in the mirror looked strange. It wasn’t like what I had seen before—too low, too hard, and without any trace of pregnancy.
“Vanessa,” I tried to keep my voice calm, “how many months along are you again?” “Six,” she answered quickly, but she wouldn’t look at me. My chest tightened. “Where is the ultrasound?” I asked. “Where are the doctor’s prescriptions?” She suddenly went silent.
I approached and touched her stomach. It didn’t move. It wasn’t warm. And when I slightly pulled her dress, that was when I saw the truth. A fake belly. Thick padding wrapped in cloth. My whole body went cold.
“Where is the baby?” I shouted. “Where is my child?!” Vanessa cried and collapsed to the floor. “Forgive me… forgive me,” she sobbed. “I’m not pregnant. I was just afraid you’d leave me too. I only did this so you would marry me.”
My world felt like it crumbled. In the silence of a night that should have been happy, I ran out of the hotel—without direction, without dignity. Only one name was in my mind: Grace.
I went straight to our old house. The living room light was still on. When she opened the door and saw me, she wasn’t surprised. “I know,” she said calmly. “That you would come.” “I was fooled,” I said, almost crying. “She isn’t carrying anything. Everything is a lie.”
Grace just nodded. “There is one more thing I didn’t say back then,” she added. She took out an envelope—the real results from the hospital examination. “I wasn’t the one with the problem,” she said softly. “It was you. Your sperm count is low. There’s almost no chance.”
I read the paper over and over. Every word was like a knife piercing my chest. “I didn’t tell you,” she continued, “because I knew you couldn’t handle it. But you chose to blame me… and destroy everything.”
I fell to my knees. I couldn’t stop the tears. “Forgive me,” I whispered. But it was too late. “I loved you,” Grace said. “But I loved myself more.” She closed the door.
After a few years, I heard she had a new family. She had a son—healthy, happy. While I… Lost a wife. Lost my dignity. And the most painful part— I didn’t lose a child. I never had the ability to have a child from the very beginning.
And that’s when I fully understood Grace‘s last words: There are regrets that come not to give you a second chance—but to remind you of everything you destroyed with your own hands.
Many years passed. My life is quiet now—too quiet. I still have a job, I have money, I have a big but cold house. At every dinner, there is only one plate on the table. No more voices. No more questions asking if I’m tired. No one waiting anymore.
I tried to start over. I had other women. Some loved me. Some said, “It’s okay even if we don’t have children.” But every time, there was fear inside me—fear of being blamed again, fear of running away again, fear of facing my own inadequacy. In the end, they left too.
One day, I happened to pass by a small clinic. In the waiting area, there was a woman whose back looked familiar. She was holding a child—a young boy, lively, laughing. It was Grace. Her face was more peaceful. Her smile was clearer. When our eyes met, she didn’t look away—she just smiled, politely, like a stranger she once knew.
“Is he your son?” I asked, even though I already knew the answer. “Yes,” she replied. “Life’s gift.” No bitterness. No reproach. I nodded. “Are you happy?” “Yes,” she answered immediately. “For a long time now.”
And there I finally understood— She didn’t leave me because I was infertile. She left me because I was a coward. Because I chose to blame her rather than face the truth. Because I prioritized lineage over love. Because I loved my own ego more than the woman who dedicated her whole life to me.
When they left, I remained standing there—alone. For the first time, I have no one to blame. No woman. No fate. No lies. Just me.
And this is the truth I learned, even if it was too late: Not every man with a name is a father. Not everyone with money has honor. And not everything lost can be returned— Especially if you were the one who pushed it away.