When Peter’s job transferred us from the U.S. to his native Germany, everything changed.
He was overjoyed to be back home, surrounded by family, but for me, it was lonely terrain. His parents, Ingrid and Klaus, were polite yet distant, and his sister Klara’s smile always carried an edge. They spoke German constantly, assuming I didn’t understand much — but I did. Over time, their whispers turned cruel. Comments about my appearance during pregnancy soon grew darker. One day, I overheard Klara murmuring that our first child “never looked like Peter,” and Ingrid agreeing that his red hair “certainly wasn’t from our side.” My chest tightened as I realized they were questioning my son’s paternity.
Months later, after our second baby arrived, I overheard something that shattered me completely. From the next room, Ingrid’s voice came soft but sharp: “She still doesn’t know, does she?” Klara laughed — “Of course not. Peter never told her the truth about the first baby.” That night, trembling, I confronted my husband. His face drained of color. Then, with shaking hands, he confessed: his family had pressured him into a secret paternity test after our son’s birth. He hadn’t wanted to hurt me, so he hid it. The test, he said quietly, had come back negative.