The moment I saw Molly, I fell for her. She was captivating—beautiful, confident, full of light. But that light dimmed quickly when her boyfriend, Tanner, walked out on her the moment she got pregnant. While others turned away, I stepped in. I didn’t think twice. I wanted to help, to give her stability, to be there for the child she was carrying. In a whirlwind of emotion and a desperate hope to fix things, I asked her to marry me.
At first, I thought we could make it work. But Molly resented the pregnancy from the start. When Amelia was born, she felt more like a prisoner in her own life, missing the freedom she used to have. She withdrew. The baby barely caught her attention. But for me, Amelia became everything. I was the one waking up in the middle of the night, warming bottles, changing diapers, whispering lullabies until dawn. I fell in love all over again—this time with my daughter.
Five years passed. Molly grew distant, cold, absent in every way that mattered. And then one day, she dropped the bomb: “I want a divorce. I’m done—with you and Amelia.” She packed up and disappeared. A month later, I found out she had reunited with Tanner—the same man who abandoned her when things got hard. Meanwhile, Amelia and I tried to piece ourselves back together. We laughed, we cried, we healed. It wasn’t easy, but it was ours.
Then, out of nowhere, Molly came back.
“I want custody of Amelia,” she declared. “Tanner’s ready to be a dad now. It’s time for her to be with her real family.”
I couldn’t believe it. I had raised Amelia. I was the one who had been there, every day, every night, through every fever, scraped knee, and first day of school. I fought to hold my anger in. “She is with her real family,” I said through gritted teeth. “With me.”