PART 1
When the DNA results arrived, no one in the room could breathe. My husband, Adrian Villareal, stared at one line on the paper. Bianca Reyes, my best friend who had just given birth, turned pale. And for the first time in three years, I smiled.
Seven days earlier, on our wedding anniversary, I blocked the doorway of a private hospital delivery room in Makati. Inside, Bianca lay in bed with the baby Adrian proudly called his son. When the nurse asked for the father’s name on the birth certificate, I took the clipboard and said, “Wait. Let’s do a DNA test first.”
Adrian went cold. Bianca began crying, acting like she was the victim. But I had stayed silent for three years while Adrian humiliated me, while his mother called me useless, and while Bianca told me I had nothing to worry about. Not anymore.
I called my lawyer, Atty. Salazar, and asked him to prepare a court-ordered paternity test. Through the speaker, he confirmed the papers were ready — including the divorce settlement. Everyone froze. Adrian repeated, “Divorce settlement?” I looked at him and said, “Isn’t that what you wanted from the beginning?”
PART 2
Three years earlier, Adrian had only married me because it was his grandmother Doña Elena’s final wish. I had cared for her during her last months, and after her funeral, Adrian told me we would live separate lives. He stayed in the main house. I stayed in the guest wing. For three years, we barely existed as husband and wife.
When my lawyer sent Adrian the divorce papers, he tore them up twice. So I brought the third copy to Villareal Prime Holdings myself. His assistant said Adrian was in a board meeting. I replied, “Good. Then everyone can hear it together.”
In front of the board, I placed the divorce papers on the table and plugged a USB drive into the laptop. The screen showed CCTV footage of Bianca at a hotel on Valentine’s Day — not with Adrian, but with his half-brother, Rafael. Adrian turned pale. Then Rafael walked into the room, saw the screen, and froze.
I revealed the real reason the board needed to know. Doña Elena had placed twelve percent of Villareal Prime Holdings shares into a family trust for Adrian’s first legitimate child. Until then, voting rights remained with the trustee — me. If Adrian registered Bianca’s baby as his son, someone could use that child to control the shares.
PART 3
The next day, we met at the hospital for the DNA results. Bianca was in bed, Adrian’s mother was furious, and Rafael could not look anyone in the eye. Atty. Salazar arrived with the sealed envelope, along with the lab representative and the nurse who had collected the samples.
The representative confirmed the samples came from the baby, Adrian, and Rafael. Bianca panicked when she heard Rafael had been tested too. Then the results were read aloud: Adrian Villareal was excluded as the biological father. Rafael Villareal had a paternity probability of more than 99.99 percent.
The room collapsed into silence. Adrian finally understood he had been betrayed by Bianca and his own brother. Then Rafael shouted the truth: Adrian had refused to divorce me because he knew he would lose access to the trust connected to my name. That was when I realized Adrian had never been afraid of losing me — only the power I held.
I handed him the final divorce settlement. This time, he signed it with a shaking hand. Weeks later, Rafael disappeared from the company after evidence showed he and Bianca had schemed for the trust shares. I left the Villareal house with two suitcases and left my cheap stainless-steel wedding ring on the table.
For the first time in three years, I lived in a home I chose for myself. When Adrian later texted, “Sorry. I finally understand what I lost,” I deleted the message. Some people only see your worth after you leave. But it is not a woman’s job to return and teach them how to love properly.
