THE WEDDING NIGHT AND THE BELLY THAT MADE THE GROOM COLLAPSE
My name is Daniel Thompson, thirty-five years old, born and raised in a small coastal town in California. I once believed my life would follow a perfect blueprint: a solid education, a stable career, a harmonious family, children to carry on the bloodline. But it turned out that it was precisely that blind belief that led me from one mistake to another—until the price I paid became something I could never redeem for the rest of my life.
1. The years of living together before marriage
I met Emily Carter—the woman who later became my wife—on an autumn afternoon. At that time, I had just graduated and was working as a sales executive for a small medical equipment company, earning only about 2,500 USD per month. Emily was an administrative assistant, gentle and quiet, with a delicate face and eyes as calm as a still lake.
Our relationship developed slowly. There was no intense passion, no dramatic romance. After more than a year of dating, I suggested that we move in together. Not because I was overly romantic, but because I was being practical: living together would save rent and daily expenses, and more importantly, I wanted to focus entirely on building my career.
I spoke to Emily honestly:
“I’m not ready to have children yet. At least not for the next few years. Please be careful with contraception so I can focus on my future.”
Emily simply nodded. She was always like that—obedient, compliant, never argumentative. She took birth control pills every day without a single complaint.
Three years passed. I was promoted to regional manager, my income rose to nearly 7,000 USD per month. I bought my own car and moved us into a larger apartment. When I proposed, Emily burst into tears of happiness.
Our wedding was simple but warm, blessed by both families. As I looked at Emily in her white wedding dress, I thought to myself: At last, I have everything.
2. The pressure called “having a child”
After the wedding, we decided to “let nature take its course” and try for our first child. I assumed it would happen naturally. But month after month passed, and Emily’s belly remained flat.
At first, I reassured her:
“It’s okay. We still have time.”
But then one year passed. Then two. Questions began appearing at every family meal:
“Any good news yet?”
“Have you gone for medical checkups?”
“Daniel is the only son, you know.”
The pressure weighed heavily on me. I became irritable, easily angered, silent at home, or I made excuses to work late. Emily grew thinner by the day, dark circles forming under her eyes.
One rainy afternoon, we decided to go to the hospital for a full fertility check. While waiting for the results, I received an urgent call from headquarters demanding my immediate presence at an emergency meeting. I had no choice but to leave Emily alone to receive the results.
That evening, when I came home, dinner was cold. Emily sat quietly at the table, her eyes red and swollen.
“So… what did the doctor say?” I asked, my heart pounding.
She stayed silent for a long time, then whispered:
“The doctor said my hormones are weak… my uterus is cold. It’ll be very hard for me to conceive naturally. Treatment would take a long time.”
A surge of anger shot straight to my head. I slammed my hand on the table.
“See? I told you! I’m tall, strong, I work out regularly—how could the problem be me? I’m the only son in my family. I won’t accept a life without children.”
Emily lowered her head, tears streaming down her face. She didn’t argue. She didn’t defend herself. That silent submission somehow made me even angrier.
3. When my heart went astray
From that day on, I changed completely. I stayed out late, drank heavily with clients, and used work as an excuse to avoid the suffocating atmosphere at home.
And then I met Sophia Miller.
Sophia was seven years younger than me, a freelance marketing consultant. She was the complete opposite of Emily—lively, fiery, outspoken, unafraid to express her emotions. Being with Sophia made me feel young again, carefree, unburdened by responsibility.
The affair began as a dangerous thrill, but soon I threw myself into it like a man dying of thirst in the desert. I knew I was wrong, but I didn’t care. I convinced myself that I deserved happiness.
Then one day, Sophia handed me a pregnancy test with two bright red lines.
“I’m pregnant.”
In that moment, I was dizzy with joy. At last, I had proven that I was perfectly normal. That exhilaration drowned out all reason.
That night, I went home and placed the divorce papers in front of Emily.
“I’m sorry. I can’t continue this marriage.”
I expected her to cry, beg, or cause a scene. But she didn’t.
Emily stared at me for a long time, her eyes hollow. Then she signed the papers.
Before leaving, she said only one sentence:
“You’ve made your decision, so I won’t stop you. I only hope that no matter what happens in the future, you won’t regret it.”
4. A rushed wedding
I divorced Emily and moved in with Sophia. I sent Emily 1,200 USD per month, considering it the last of my responsibility.
My family fiercely opposed the relationship, but once they heard Sophia was pregnant, all objections fell silent. We organized a quick wedding—simple, but complete.
Sophia was four months pregnant on our wedding day. She wore a loose gown that concealed her belly fairly well. I was proud, convinced that I had made the right choice.
On our wedding night, as I helped Sophia out of her dress under the warm yellow light, her belly appeared far larger than I had expected.
A strange unease rose in my chest. The belly was too big for a four-month pregnancy.
“You’ve been going for regular checkups, right?” I asked cautiously.
Sophia avoided my gaze.
“Daniel… there’s something I need to tell you.”
Before she could continue, my phone rang. An unfamiliar number.
“Daniel Thompson?” a calm female voice said. “This is Dr. Laura White. You’re Emily Carter’s ex-husband, correct?”
I froze.
“We recently discovered that your semen analysis results were mistakenly filed under Emily’s medical record. I think you need to know.”
I could barely breathe.
“You have complete azoospermia. Your chance of conceiving naturally is… zero.”
The phone slipped from my hand. Darkness closed in around me.
I turned to Sophia, my voice shaking:
“Whose child is this?”
Sophia collapsed to her knees, sobbing.
“I’m sorry… I was already pregnant before I met you. I needed someone to take responsibility…”
I fell to the floor, my legs giving out. All sound seemed to vanish from the room.
5. The final truth
In the chaos, Emily’s face appeared in my mind. Her last sentence echoed in my ears.
I rushed out, drove like a madman to our old apartment. But the door was shut tight.
A few days later, I received an email from Emily. Just a few short lines:
“Daniel,
I never lied to you.
The medical report back then clearly stated that the problem wasn’t me.
I chose silence because I loved you.
Now I’m about to start a new family. I wish you peace.”
Attached was an ultrasound image—with another man listed as the father.
I sat there for a long time. For the first time in my life, I understood what it truly meant to lose everything.
Money, status, youth—none of them could buy back one thing I had thrown away:
the truth, and loyalty.
That night, in the cold wedding suite, I cried like a child.
But it was already far too late.