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The Donor's Claim_ My Ex-Husband's Biggest Mistake Novel Cover

The Donor's Claim_ My Ex-Husband's Biggest Mistake

"Take the brat and get out!" David screamed, throwing my toddler's toy across the room. "He’s not even my blood anyway!" That was the final straw. David was the one who begged me to use a donor because he was sterile. Now that his mistress is 'pregnant' (a miracle, or a lie?), he’s discarding us like trash. I signed the divorce papers and left with nothing but my son, Leo. I thought we would be alone. I didn't expect a convoy of black SUVs to surround my rusty Honda. A man stepped out—a man with the exact same ice-blue eyes as my son. "I believe," he said in a voice that cost more than my life, "you have something of mine."
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Chapter 1

The sound of David's key in the lock made my stomach clench, the way it had every evening for the past three months. I set down my coffee cup with trembling fingers, watching the dark liquid slosh against the ceramic rim. The grandfather clock in the hallway chimed seven-thirty, its deep resonance echoing through our too-quiet house.

"Sarah!" His voice boomed from the entryway, carrying an energy I hadn't heard in years. "Sarah, where are you?"

I remained seated at the kitchen table, my hands folded in my lap like a schoolgirl awaiting punishment. The overhead light cast harsh shadows across the granite countertops, making everything feel cold and sterile. "In here," I called back, my voice barely above a whisper.

Footsteps thundered down the hallway—not his usual tired shuffle, but something urgent, almost manic. David burst through the kitchen doorway, his face flushed and his eyes bright with an excitement that made my chest tighten with dread.

"You're not going to believe this," he said, loosening his tie with one hand while running the other through his graying hair. "I mean, the doctors said it was impossible, but here we are."

I watched him pace back and forth in front of the kitchen island, his movements restless and electric. The last time I'd seen him this animated was when he'd gotten his promotion five years ago. Before the diagnosis. Before everything changed.

"David, what are you talking about?" I asked, though something in my gut already knew. The way he couldn't meet my eyes, the guilty flush creeping up his neck, the forced enthusiasm that didn't quite mask the underlying panic.

He stopped pacing and turned to face me, his hands braced against the counter. "It's a miracle, Sarah. An absolute miracle." His voice cracked on the word, and for a moment, I saw the man I'd married twenty years ago—vulnerable, desperate to be believed.

"She's pregnant."

The words hit me like a physical blow. I gripped the edge of the table, my knuckles white against the dark wood. The kitchen suddenly felt too small, the walls pressing in around us. "Who's pregnant, David?"

But I already knew. Jessica. Twenty-six years old, blonde hair that caught the light just right, legs that went on forever. His "research assistant" who worked late nights and weekend conferences. The woman whose perfume I'd smelled on his shirts, whose lipstick I'd found on his collar.

"Jessica," he said, and there it was—the name that had haunted our marriage for months, spoken aloud for the first time in our kitchen. "She's eight weeks along."

I stood up slowly, my legs unsteady beneath me. The room tilted slightly, and I had to grip the back of my chair to keep from falling. "Eight weeks."

"I know what you're thinking," David said quickly, his words tumbling over each other. "I know what the doctors said about me. No sperm count, remember? Zero. Zilch. But this proves they were wrong, doesn't it? This proves that maybe we could still—"

"Stop." The word came out sharper than I intended, cutting through his rambling justification. "Just stop."

He fell silent, his mouth still open as if the words were stuck in his throat. The refrigerator hummed in the background, and somewhere outside, a dog barked. Normal sounds of a normal evening in a normal house, except nothing about this was normal.

"Do you hear yourself?" I asked, my voice steady despite the tremor in my hands. "Do you actually hear what you're saying?"

David's face crumpled slightly, the manic energy deflating like a punctured balloon. "Sarah, please. I know this is complicated, but—"

"Complicated?" I laughed, but there was no humor in it. "You're calling your pregnant mistress complicated?"

"She's not my mistress," he protested, but the words sounded hollow even to him. "It was just... it happened, okay? And when she told me about the baby, I realized that maybe the doctors were wrong. Maybe there's still hope for us."

I stared at him, this man I'd shared a bed with for two decades, whose dreams I'd supported and whose failures I'd forgiven. The man who'd held me while I cried every month when the pregnancy test came back negative. Who'd sat beside me in sterile doctor's offices as we received one devastating diagnosis after another.

"Hope for us?" I repeated slowly. "David, she's carrying another man's child."

The color drained from his face. "What are you talking about?"

"The doctors weren't wrong," I said, each word deliberate and precise. "You have no sperm count. Zero. That baby isn't yours."

He shook his head violently, backing away from me as if I'd slapped him. "No, that's not... she wouldn't... we were together, Sarah. Multiple times. The timing works out perfectly."

"The timing works out for whoever she was sleeping with besides you."

The silence that followed was deafening. David's breathing became labored, his chest rising and falling in rapid succession. I watched him process the information, saw the exact moment when reality began to crack through his desperate delusion.

"You don't know that," he whispered, but his voice had lost all conviction.

"I do know that," I said quietly. "And deep down, so do you."

He sank into the chair across from me, his head in his hands. For a moment, I almost felt sorry for him. Almost. But then I remembered the months of lies, the late nights, the way he'd made me feel like I was crazy for suspecting what I knew to be true.

"What am I going to do?" he asked, his voice muffled by his palms.

I looked at this broken man across from me, this stranger wearing my husband's face, and felt something inside me shift. The last thread of whatever had been holding us together finally snapped.

"I don't know, David," I said, standing up and walking toward the door. "But whatever you decide, you'll be doing it alone."

As I left him sitting there in the harsh kitchen light, I could hear him calling my name. But I didn't turn around. For the first time in months, I knew exactly where I was going.

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