I was ten when I lost my mom, and it shattered me. She died just minutes after discovering my dad had been unfaithful—a secret I had kept, thinking I was protecting her. Seven years later, I caught him doing it again. This time, I wasn’t going to stay silent.
I learned two painful lessons as a child: secrets destroy families, and silence can kill. My mother’s discovery of Dad’s affair came from a simple text message: “Miss you already. Last night was amazing. Can’t wait to see you again.” I didn’t need to read it twice to understand.
What haunted me most was that I had known about it a week before she did. One night, I overheard Dad whispering on the phone, “You’re the only thing keeping me sane these days. I love you, Sarah.” I confronted him, but he begged me not to tell Mom. “If she finds out, it’ll ruin everything. Our family will fall apart,” he had pleaded, his eyes filled with desperation. I was too young to recognize manipulation, but I understood fear. And so, I stayed silent.
But the truth has a way of coming out. A week later, Mom saw that message. She stormed out, grabbed her car keys, and drove away.
Twenty minutes later, she was gone.
The accident report said she sped through an intersection, colliding with a truck. I blamed Dad. I blamed myself. If I had told her sooner, would she have been calmer? Would she have paid more attention to the road?
After Mom’s death, Dad fell apart. He stopped smiling, stopped shaving, stopped being the man he used to be. I wanted to hate him forever, but hate is heavy. Over time, I forgave him—not for him, but for myself.
When I was fifteen, he married Diana. She was warm, kind, and nothing like the woman he had cheated with. For the first time in years, I thought maybe we could be a real family again. But I should have known better.
Two years later, I noticed something strange—Dad sneaking out at night. The first time, I brushed it off. But then it happened again. And again. I asked Diana, but she hadn’t noticed. That’s when I knew something wasn’t right.
One night, I decided to follow him. He caught me at first and told me he was going to my Mom’s grave. He said this was the only time he had in the day because he was too busy with everything.
I was about to believe him, but 2a.m was not a reasonable time for visiting a graveyard. So I decided to keep following him, and when I saw him, he drove into a hotel.
I watched as he walked two blocks to his hidden car and drove off. I stayed close behind, my heart pounding. Twenty minutes later, he pulled into a luxury hotel parking lot.
And then I saw her.
A young woman in a tight red dress stepped out, smiling as she wrapped her arms around him. He hugged her back.
Rage boiled inside me. After everything, he was doing it again. I wasn’t going to let history repeat itself.
I called Diana.
When she arrived, I pointed her to room 512. She stormed up, knocked hard, and when the door swung open, there he was—shirtless, looking like he’d just been caught in the middle of something.
“D-Diana?! Mia? What are you—”
“Save it,” Diana snapped. “Who is she?”
His mistress appeared behind him, lipstick smeared, hair a mess.
“I don’t want to hear your excuses,” Diana said, her voice shaking. “You broke more than my trust today, David.”
A week later, Diana and I moved out. She refused to let me stay elsewhere. “You’re the only person I can trust right now,” she said.
Dad has been calling and texting nonstop, begging for a second chance.
But some betrayals can never be undone.