I had a DNA test done for my baby to silence my husband’s family, and the result was negative. But the worst part wasn’t that… the worst part was my husband’s laughter when he read the paper.
I didn’t know how long I stood there. The noise in the room slowly returned—glasses clinking, someone coughing uncomfortably, a child laughing without understanding. But for me, everything remained silent, as if I were underwater.
Diego slowly opened the envelope.
My fingers tightened around Matthew’s tiny body. I wanted to say something. I had to say something. But what words could save this moment?
He pulled out the paper.
My mother-in-law leaned forward, her eyes bright with curiosity and that familiar, sharp delight. My father-in-law folded his arms, already prepared to judge.
—“Read it out loud, son,” he said.
Diego didn’t speak immediately. First, he looked at me again. That look… it wasn’t just a warning anymore. It was a choice.
And then he began to read.
—“According to the results of the DNA analysis…”
My heart hammered in my throat.
—“…there is a 99.99% probability that the tested man is the biological father of the child.”
The world suddenly grew noisy again.
—“What?” my mother-in-law cried out.
I blinked. I tried to breathe.
—“That’s… that’s not possible,” I whispered.
Diego turned the paper around, as if he wanted to show it to everyone.
—“It says it clearly right there, Mom. I am his father.”
The room began to whisper. The tension shattered like glass, but the shards were still lying around. My mother-in-law looked at me, her eyes now filled with something else—no longer triumph, but doubt.
—“But… we said… he doesn’t look like…”
—“Maybe you’re looking at it wrong,” Diego interrupted her, soft but firm.
I couldn’t stay silent any longer.
—“That’s not that result,” I suddenly said, my voice breaking. —“That’s not the right paper.”
Silence fell again. Diego turned slowly toward me.
—“Valerie,” he said, almost whispering, —“think carefully about what you’re saying right now.”
But I had already gone too far.
—“I saw it! I saw the other result! It was negative! You know it!”
A shocked murmur went through the guests. My mother-in-law pressed her hand against her chest.
—“Negative?”
Diego closed his eyes, just for a moment. Then he sighed.
—“Yes,” he finally said. —“There was another result.”
The truth washed over the room like cold water.
—“What does that mean?” my father-in-law asked, his voice harsh.
Diego looked at Matthew, then back at me.
—“It means… that things aren’t as simple as you think.”
—“Say it straight!” my mother-in-law screamed.
And then, without raising his voice, Diego changed everything.
—“I had another test done. Before Valerie even knew.”
My breath caught. —“What?”
—“I had doubts,” he said, honest, without apology. —“Not about her… but about everything. About how quickly you all started talking. About how you treated her.”
He took a step closer to me.
—“And that first test… was flawed.”
The room remained silent.
—“Flawed?” someone whispered.
—“Yes. The lab made a mistake. Samples were mixed up. I had it re-checked. I got confirmation.”
He held the paper up again.
—“This is the real result.”
I felt my legs tremble.
—“Why didn’t you tell me?” I asked, my voice barely audible.
He looked at me for a long time.
—“Because I wanted to see if you would trust me… as I trusted you.”
Those words cut deeper than any accusation. I looked at Matthew, my eyes full of tears. My child. Our child. My mother-in-law slowly sat down, her world clearly shifting.
—“So… he really is an Artega?”
Diego smiled, but this time there was no irony.
—“He is my son.”
And for the first time that night, he reached out gently and touched my shoulder. I didn’t walk away. I couldn’t. Because in that moment I understood: the truth wasn’t just in the blood, but in the choices we make.
The End:
Later that night, when the guests were gone and the house finally grew quiet, I sat alone in Matthew’s room. The moonlight fell softly through the curtains, and his breathing was peaceful, unaware of everything that had happened.
Diego stood at the door.
—“We need to talk,” he said.
I nodded.
There were still questions. Still pain. Still things that had been broken and needed to be rebuilt. But there was also something else. A chance. Not to be perfect. Not to be flawless. But to be honest.
I looked at him.
—“No more secrets?”
He nodded slowly.
—“No more secrets.”
And for the first time since 그 day at the lab, I felt that the truth—no matter how complex—might not be the end of our story… but the beginning of a new one.
