I thought it was just a school DNA project, harmless and simple. But when my husband Greg refused, something felt wrong. So I secretly sent his sample anyway. When the results came back, my world collapsed: I was Tiffany’s mother, but Greg shared zero DNA. Instead, a 99.9% match appeared under another name — Mike, Greg’s best friend and our daughter’s godfather.
Three months earlier, everything seemed normal. Tiffany was excited about her genetics assignment, but Greg reacted strangely, refusing outright and even destroying the kit. That night, our daughter cried herself to sleep. Something shifted in him after that. I couldn’t ignore it. So I used his coffee mug for a DNA sample and mailed it, convincing myself I was protecting my child, not betraying my husband.
When I confronted Greg, he admitted the truth. During IVF, he discovered he was infertile and, without my consent, used Mike as a donor, even forging my signature. Mike confirmed it, calling it a “favor” to save our marriage. But it wasn’t help — it was a violation. They made a decision about my body and my child without me. I called the police, knowing silence would only protect their betrayal.
I asked Greg to leave. Not out of anger alone, but because trust was gone. Tiffany deserved honesty and stability. When she asked if he was still her father, I told her the truth: he is the man who raised her, and that will never change. But our future will be built on truth, not lies. Because biology may explain where we begin — but trust decides where we go.