Her words hit me like a punch, leaving me frozen in my seat at the café. I couldn’t look away from little Marcella’s wide brown eyes—so much like his—and something twisted deep in my gut. Across the table, his wife, Dalia, sat perfectly still. Not crying. Not yelling. Just calm and pale, her hands folded in her lap, and somehow that unnerved me more than if she’d lashed out.
“I never meant to hurt you,” I said quickly. “He told me he was miserable… that your marriage had been over for years.”
Dalia gave a soft, almost sad laugh. “Let me guess—he said he was leaving me? Said we’d fallen out of love?” She looked at me evenly. “That’s what he tells all of them. He’s been saying the same thing since before our youngest was born.”
It felt like the air was sucked out of the room. I had met him eight months ago at a wine bar. He was magnetic—witty, warm, and full of life. He made me feel noticed, cherished, even. We’d shared so many nights, talked about the future, even tossed around baby names once I got pregnant.
But now, sitting across from his wife and watching his children, reality set in. I wasn’t the first woman he’d done this to. And I probably wouldn’t be the last.
Dalia looked at her kids and spoke softly, “Go wait outside for me.” They left quietly, as if this scene was familiar. Then she turned back to me, her gaze sharper. “I’m not here to fight you. I just don’t want my kids growing up hating their father—or you.”
Her compassion stunned me more than any confrontation would have. She reached into her bag and handed me a folded paper. “This is the name of a counselor I saw after his first affair. You’re going to need it more than I do.”
My hands trembled as I took it. “How are you… so calm?”
Her eyes softened. “Because I stopped blaming myself for his choices a long time ago. And now you’re carrying his child. I want you to know you’re not alone. I won’t let him disappear on you the way he wants to.”
I couldn’t speak. I’d expected fury, maybe even cruelty. But instead, I found something closer to grace. Dalia pulled out an envelope and slid it across the table. “This should help you get started. He might not be dependable, but my children won’t have a sibling out there struggling. Please—accept it. Don’t let pride stop you.”
Tears slipped down my face as I took the envelope. “Why would you help me?”
She looked at me with something between kindness and sorrow. “Because once, I was you. I was 23 when I fell for a man who promised he’d leave his girlfriend for me. He did. Then he started doing the same thing to me.”