One Man's Love Is Another Man's Poison
Five years after our son was born, I finally faced the truth: my wife didn't love me—or our boy.
Determined to end this miserable marriage, I made plans to leave and take our son with me.
But fate had other ideas. A car accident cost me a kidney and took our son's eye.
At my lowest point, my usually distant wife fell to her knees right in the hospital corridor, begging for forgiveness. She swore she would spend the rest of her life taking care of us.
We decided to give her one last chance—a 100-day trial. If she made it, we'd stay together.
But on the ninety-ninth day, my son and I overheard her talking to the attending physician.
"Emma," the doctor said, "did you really arrange that accident to secure organs for Daniel Carter's son? You did that to take a kidney from your husband and an eye from your son—was it worth it?"
Emma Evans's voice was eerily calm. "It was worth it. As long as Daniel is happy, I'd do anything."
"And what if your husband and son find out?"
She fell silent for a moment, then instinctively touched the wedding ring on her hand. "Then they'll never know. They just want a family; I'll do everything I can to make up for it."
So the "changed woman" we thought we knew was just an act—a carefully built lie.
The happiness my son and I had begun to believe in was nothing more than a story she'd crafted to protect the person she really loved.
Every kindness, every effort—it had all been quietly weighed and paid for in advance.