My Husband Called And Said, ‘Come To My Mother’s House — The Family Needs To Talk,’ But When I Arrived, His Entire Family Was Sitting In Silence… Then He Handed Me A DNA Test And Said, ‘The Boy Isn’t Mine,’ While My Mother-In-Law Pointed At The Door And Said, ‘Take Your Child And Go’ — Part 2

This gathering had never been about truth.

It had been about punishment.

Lorraine stepped closer.

“I think it’s time for you to leave now.”

Her tone carried complete certainty.

That certainty lasted exactly three seconds.

Because before I could reach the front door, someone knocked loudly from the outside.

Not politely.

Not cautiously.

Firmly.

Authoritatively.

The room fell silent again.

Lorraine frowned and walked toward the entrance while everyone exchanged confused looks.

When the door opened, a tall man in a charcoal-gray suit stepped inside carrying a leather briefcase and looking visibly anxious.

His tie sat crooked beneath his collar as though he had rushed there directly from work.

He scanned the room quickly before his eyes landed on the paperwork still trembling in my hands.

Then he looked directly at Wesley.

“Mr. Mercer,” he said carefully, “I need to speak with you immediately regarding those DNA results.”

The atmosphere changed instantly.

Lorraine’s confidence faltered for the first time all evening.

Wesley blinked in confusion.

“What?”

The man reached into his jacket and produced an identification badge.

“My name is Adrian Keller. I’m a senior coordinator with Brighton Genetic Labs.”

Nobody spoke.

I could actually hear the grandfather clock ticking from the hallway.

Adrian swallowed hard before continuing.

“There was a serious processing mistake involving your test samples.”

Every nerve in my body froze.

Wesley stared at him. “What kind of mistake?”

Adrian opened his briefcase and removed a blue folder.

“A labeling discrepancy occurred during intake earlier this week. Two cases submitted close together were incorrectly entered into the system before verification.”

Lorraine immediately crossed her arms.

“That sounds extremely convenient.”

Adrian didn’t react emotionally.

“The laboratory completed an emergency audit this afternoon after the discrepancy was discovered. We reprocessed the verified samples using corrected identification procedures.”

Wesley’s face slowly lost color.

I could barely breathe.

“What does that mean?” I whispered.

Adrian looked at me gently.

Then he answered the question that shattered the entire room.

“It means the report you received was assigned to the wrong family.”

Silence.

Absolute silence.

Even Owen lifted his head slightly from my shoulder as though he sensed the emotional earthquake moving through the room.

Adrian opened the blue folder.

“The corrected results were finalized at four-thirty this afternoon.”

Wesley stepped forward anxiously.

“And?”

Adrian looked directly at him.

“The probability of paternity is ninety-nine point nine nine percent.”

Nobody moved.

Nobody even seemed capable of breathing.

Then Adrian finished quietly:

“Your son is biologically yours, Mr. Mercer.”

The Sound Of Everything Falling Apart

The silence afterward felt completely different from the earlier silence.

Before, it had been cruel.

Now it was hollow.

Collapsed.

Humiliated.

Lorraine’s face drained of color while several relatives immediately avoided eye contact. Wesley stared at the corrected report like a man watching his entire identity crack apart in real time.

I watched realization hit him piece by piece.

Not only had he doubted me.

He had publicly destroyed me before even waiting for certainty.

Finally he looked at me again, and this time there was no emotional distance left in his eyes.

Only regret.

“Nora—”

“Don’t.”

My voice came out calm enough to frighten even me.

He stopped immediately.

Lorraine tried recovering first.

“Well, clearly the laboratory has serious credibility issues if two completely different results were produced.”

Adrian closed the folder carefully.

“The initial error was procedural, Mrs. Mercer. The corrected report has been verified multiple times by independent review staff.”

Nobody defended Lorraine now.

Nobody defended Wesley either.

I adjusted Owen against my shoulder while he yawned sleepily, completely unaware that his entire future had nearly been rearranged because grown adults preferred suspicion over trust.

Then I looked directly at my husband.

“This little boy was still your son when everyone in this room decided to treat me like garbage.”

Wesley lowered his head.

I continued quietly.

“But the moment that paper appeared, you stopped being my husband.”

His face crumpled slightly.

“I was scared.”

“You were eager to believe the worst about me.”

“No,” he said immediately. “That’s not true.”

“It is true,” I replied. “Because if you truly trusted me, one report wouldn’t have erased years of marriage in a single evening.”

Continue to Part 3 Part 2 of 3

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