
His Secret Wife and Son
Chapter 3
He said he’d come.
For the first time in seven years, Giovanni promised to show up.
When his message appeared on my phone — [I’ll be there] — I read it twice just to be sure. Then I showed it to Leo like it was a miracle.
“See, baby? Daddy’s coming tonight.”
His whole face lit up.
He spent the entire afternoon telling me about the awards he’d won, the compliments from his teachers, how he’d been elected class leader.
“He’ll be proud of me, right, Mom? Maybe he’ll finally like me.”
I smiled, even as something heavy pressed against my chest. “Of course, sweetheart. He’ll see how amazing you are.”
By six o’clock, the clock on our wall had chimed more times than I could count.
The meeting started at seven.
Giovanni still hadn’t shown.
I told myself he might be stuck in traffic. That maybe his phone had died.
Anything but the truth I already knew.
Then my phone lit up.
Not from him.
From her.
A public post on Instagram — Elena Duval, his long-lost love, smiling for the camera.
Behind her, Giovanni was kneeling beside a small boy, helping him build a LEGO tower.
Caption: “Future best dad.”
My throat closed.
Leo sat quietly on the couch, sorting the same kind of LEGO bricks.
Same toy. Same age.
The only difference was that the man beside him wasn’t his father.
He looked up when he felt my stare. “Mom… did he forget again?”
I wanted to tell him no. That his father was busy saving the world or running the Romano empire or doing anything other than choosing another child over his own.
But lies were all I had left to give.
“It’s okay, baby,” I whispered, pulling him close. “You’ve still got me. I’ll always be here.”
He didn’t cry. He just nodded, his little jaw tightening the way Giovanni’s used to when he hid anger.
And that broke me more than tears ever could.
We drove to the school anyway.
The night air was cool, and the building glowed softly under the streetlights.
Neither of us spoke. It was easier that way — to pretend the silence didn’t mean disappointment.
When we walked into the classroom, the words died in my throat.
“Giovanni?”
“Daddy?”
He was there.
Standing in the front row, beside Elena, one hand resting on that same little boy’s shoulder.
His dark suit, his faint smile — all for someone else.
I felt Leo’s hand slip from mine.
That was the second chance.
And Giovanni Romano had just wasted it.