I didn’t understand it at first.
For months, he had been talking about it like it was destiny—like those two little boys were meant to be ours. He showed me photos, spoke about “becoming a real family,” even started rearranging the spare room into a shared bedroom before anything was finalized.
I thought it was love. I thought it was him being ready for something bigger than us.
Then, one afternoon, everything changed.
He didn’t know I was home early.
I heard him on the phone in the kitchen, his voice lower than usual—careful, almost rehearsed.
“They’ll approve it faster if we look stable,” he said. “A couple adopting twins has a much better chance than me doing it alone.”
A pause.
Then the words that made my stomach drop:
“And once it’s done… the support payments and benefits will help a lot. It’s temporary anyway. We can figure the rest out later.”
I stood still in the hallway, my hand tightening around my bag.
It wasn’t about family.
It wasn’t about the boys.
It was about paperwork, approval, and money he thought would come with them.
The kitchen light felt too bright when I finally stepped in. He turned around and smiled like nothing had happened—but I think he saw it in my face immediately.
I didn’t yell. I didn’t ask questions I already knew the answers to.
I just went upstairs, opened the closet, and started packing my things.
Because whatever future he had been building in his head… I wasn’t part of it anymore.