“Repeat what you just said?”
Emma stood in the middle of the living room, fingers gripping the back of an armchair. She stared at James, the man shed spent nearly twenty years withthe man she thought she knew inside out. Theyd never had childrenfirst it was “not the right time,” then “lets wait a bit longer,” and eventually, it just never happened. Theyd weathered it all together: the mortgage, the endless DIY projects, the lean years, the rare holidays. Their marriage had been steady, reliableno grand passion, just warmth and familiarity.
James sighed heavily. He winced like he had a toothache, gave Emma a guilty look, and repeated himself slowly, as if explaining something terribly complicated.
“A few years back, I had a fling,” James kept his eyes fixed on the carpet pattern. “Stupid mistake, a moment of weakness. You remember how rough things were between us then? I messed up, I admit it. And now well, shes back in touch.”
Emma stayed silent, her stomach twisting into knots.
“She found me and told me I have a daughter,” James continued, still not meeting her eyes. “Shes three.”
The room tilted. Just like that, in a single breath, her life and marriage shattered into pieces.
“Em, I swear,” James stepped toward her, hands outstretched. “I feel nothing for that woman. Its only you I love. Ill stay with you, understand? Ill help financiallybecause kids arent to blame for adults mistakes. But I dont need them. I only need you.”
Emma sank into the armchair, arms wrapped around herself. Hot tears streaked down her cheeks, but she barely noticed. James knelt beside her, tentatively touching her shoulder.
“We can start fresh, Em,” he whispered, voice pleading like a childs. “It was a mistake, nothing more. Shes no threat to us. I promise. Forgive me, love”
It took Emma months to forgive him. Her love was stronger than the hurt, the humiliation. She truly believed they could fix itthat twenty years of marriage wouldnt collapse over one stupid blunder. James was so grateful, so tender, she almost convinced herself the worst was behind them.
But time proved her wrong. James started vanishing more often”just popping round with a gift for Lily,” or “its the school play, I cant miss it.” Soon, he was smiling in a way Emma hadnt seen in years when he talked about the little girl. Then he began mentioning the mother, warmth creeping into his voice.
“Sophies doing brilliantly with her,” James said over dinner, cutting into his steak. “And Lilys so much like memy eyes, my dimples, even my stubborn streak.”
Emma tried to ignore how her husband was changing, how his face lit up at the mention of his daughterand Sophie. But the ache grew sharper every day. James worked late, skipped their rare date nights, disappeared on weekends. She could feel herself fading from his life, replaced by the woman whod given him what she never could.
The breaking point came the night of the theatre. A rare treat Emma had been looking forward to for weeks. Shed bought a new navy-blue dress, styled her hair, let herself hope things might mend.
Then James called an hour before they were meant to leave. She knew before he even spokethe night was off.
“Lilys running a fever40 degrees,” he said in a rush. “Sophies panicking, the GP cant come for two hours. I have to go. You understand, dont you?”
He didnt come home until morning. Emma knew hed stayed the nightunder the same roof as Sophie and their daughter. She couldnt pretend anymore.
“All you think about is them!” she shouted, waving her arms. “Her, Lily, everything but me! When did you last ask how I was? When did we last spend a weekend together? When did you last kiss me?”
James started defending himself, but the guilt in his voice had vanished. Now it was just exhaustion, irritation at having to explain.
“Em, shes my child. My daughter. I cant ignore her. I have to be part of her life.”
Thats when Emma knew: his “mistake” wasnt one anymore. Sophie and Lily were his life nowmaybe the most important part. And she? She was just a shadow, a relic of the past.
“What happened to your promises?” she asked quietly, sitting opposite him. “You swore they meant nothing. That you loved only me. Remember?”
James rubbed his forehead, silent. The quiet was louder than words.
“I meant it at the time,” he finally admitted. “But I love Lily. Shes clever, funny and I love So” He cut himself off.
“Go on,” Emma pressed, though she already knew.
“Sophie too,” he muttered. “Ive realised what a real family is. Its where theres a child, a future.”
His words hit her like ice water. He didnt just love the child. He loved Sophie. This wasnt just an affair or financial supportit was a second family. And that was the end.
“Youre sleeping with her.” Not a question.
James nodded, eyes down. No point lying now.
“And what am I? Not family?” Emma stood, steel in her voice. “Twenty years of marriagethats nothing?”
“Em, when theres a child, its different,” James said. “You wouldnt get it.”
“Oh, now its my fault?” Emma screamed, all the pain bursting out. “Every time I mentioned kids, you had excuses: career, money, the flat, timing. Now suddenly our family isnt good enough?”
James looked at her, pitiful.
“I was wrong then. But I have a daughter now. Youll have to accept that. We can work something out. We dont have to”
“Dont have to what?” Emma laughed bitterly. “Divorce? What would your precious Sophie say? Though, why would she care? She shagged a married manclearly shames not her strong suit!”
“Dont talk about Sophie like that,” James snapped. “Shes a good woman. A brilliant mum.”
“And Im the bad wife? Fine. Have it your way.”
She wasnt staying another minute. Emma turned and marched to the bedroom to pack. James followed, watching helplessly as she flung clothes into a suitcase.
“Em, lets talk properly. Dont be hasty. Maybe we can compromise.”
“Hasty?” She didnt look up. “Ive put up with your double life for three years. Three years of watching you become a stranger. Ive been too patient already. Let you humiliate me. While you two”
“Where will you go?” James asked, lost. “The flats half yours. You cant just leave.”
“Ill take my halfof the flat, the savings, everything,” Emma said, zipping the suitcase. “Twenty years counts for something. Then you can run off to your new family, lie and cheat to your hearts content. Im done being your doormat.”
James reached for her arm, but she jerked away.
“I never meant for this to happen. It just did. I didnt plan to fall in love.”
“Nothing just happens,” Emma shot back, hefting her bag. “You chose Lily. You chose Sophie. Live with it.”
A month later, divorce papers signed, Emma moved into a small two-bed flat across town. It was bright but empty. The first few days passed in eerie quiet. She wandered the rooms, unused to the absence of another person.
She had to relearn how to live alonebuying groceries for one, cooking single portions, sleeping in an empty bed.
At the park, she watched mothers with prams, kids on swings. The cruel truth hit her: because of James, shed lost her chance at a child of her own.
But she wasnt giving up. Her phone browser was full of tabsadoption agencies, foster care. Somewhere out there was a child who needed her love, all the warmth shed saved over the years. Shed find them. And shed have a real familyhonest, whole, and hers.






