THE DAY MY SON BROUGHT HOME A SINGLE MOTHER — AND MY FATHER COLLAPSED
My name is Anna Williams, twenty-seven years old.
I once believed my life would follow a simple path, just like everyone else’s: graduate from college, find a stable job, get married after a few years, have children, and live a quiet, ordinary life.
But life never asked me whether I wanted “ordinary.”
It simply pushed me into crossroads where, if I wasn’t ruthless enough, I wouldn’t survive.
1.
Right after graduating with a degree in international business, I was fortunate enough to land a job as an executive secretary at an import–export company based in California. For a fresh graduate, it was a dream job.
My starting salary was $2,800 per month, not including bonuses.
On my first day, I cried in the restroom out of sheer joy. I thought,
Finally, life is smiling at me.
I was wrong.
My boss was Richard Coleman, fifty-five years old, the company’s CEO. He was the classic successful man—tailored suits, polished leather shoes, calm speech, sharp eyes.
During the first few months, Richard was professional. He praised my intelligence, my efficiency, my work ethic.
Until he began caring about me more than necessary.
2.
Private compliments.
Late-night phone calls.
“Accidental” touches.
I felt uncomfortable, but I didn’t dare react. I needed that job.
Then my father was hospitalized.
He was diagnosed with end-stage kidney failure and needed regular dialysis. Insurance covered only part of the cost. Every month, the medical bills reached nearly $15,000—far beyond what my family could afford.
I was desperate.
One evening, Richard asked me to stay behind in his office.
He looked at me for a long moment, then spoke bluntly, without sugarcoating anything:
— “Anna, I need affection. You need money.”
I froze.
— “If you agree to be with me, I’ll give you $25,000 to treat your father.”
My hands trembled.
I was disgusted by the offer.
But I was even more terrified of the thought of losing my father because I couldn’t afford his treatment.
That night, I cried until there were no tears left.
And then… I nodded.
3.
I became the third woman in Richard’s life—though he always claimed his marriage was “nothing but a formality.”
We were involved for six months.
I didn’t love him.
I endured him.
Until the day I discovered I was pregnant.
When the pregnancy test showed two lines, my hands shook so badly I dropped it onto the bathroom floor.
I was terrified. Lost. But strangely, I couldn’t bring myself to abort the baby.
When I told Richard, his expression darkened immediately.
— “Get rid of it.”
— “I can’t let this ruin my career.”
— “I’ll give you money, but that child cannot exist.”
For the first time, I looked at him with hatred.
I knew that if I stayed, I would lose my soul.
So I walked away, quit my job, moved to another state, and cut off all contact.
I gave birth to my son alone.
4.
Being a single mother at twenty-four was anything but easy.
I worked all kinds of jobs—waitressing, retail, part-time assistant work. Some nights, my son had a high fever. I held him while crying, wondering where I had gone wrong.
My son’s name is Lucas.
He is the only reason I stayed standing.
I never contacted Richard again.
I never intended to let that man meet my child.
That past… I wanted to bury it forever.
5.
Two years later, I met Henry Miller.
Henry was three years older than me, a software engineer. Calm, kind, with eyes that made people feel safe.
When I confessed that I was a single mother, my heart nearly leapt out of my chest.
Henry was silent for a few seconds, then asked:
— “May I meet your son?”
From that day on, Henry treated Lucas like his own. He taught him how to play soccer, read him bedtime stories, patiently listened to his childish tales.
Whenever the three of us went out to eat, Henry would proudly introduce us:
— “This is my family.”
I thought… maybe heaven was finally compensating me.
6.
Until the day Henry took me home to meet his parents.
I was so nervous I couldn’t sleep. I was afraid his family wouldn’t accept me—a woman with a past, with a child of her own.
But I told myself: As long as I’m sincere.
The moment I stepped into the spacious suburban house, I went numb.
The man sitting on the sofa was Richard Coleman.
My former boss.
The man I had spent years trying to forget.
Henry smiled casually and said:
— “Anna, this is my father.”
I hadn’t even had time to react when Richard looked up and saw me.
His face drained of color.
Within seconds, he collapsed unconscious.
7.
Richard is now lying in a hospital bed.
Henry is confused. His family is in shock.
And I… feel as though my past has been stripped bare under harsh light.
I truly love Henry.
I want to forget who I once was.
But in this situation…
Do I even have the right to stand beside him anymore?