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My Wife and My Mistress Got Pregnant at the Same Time – Eight Months Later, What I Discovered Made My Blood Run Cold

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By Monica Otayza-Go
Jun 10, 2026
05:32 A.M.

For months, I thought I was getting away with the biggest lie of my life. Then one night, a single trip to the hospital exposed everything and led to a truth I never saw coming.

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My wife and my mistress got pregnant at the same time.

Nine months later, what I discovered made my blood run cold.

When my wife told me she was pregnant, I was terrified.

Not because I didn't want the baby, but because I had just discovered that my mistress was pregnant too.

For nine months, I lied to both women.

I kept promising myself I'd tell the truth.

I never did.

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Then, the day came when everything fell apart.

At 2 a.m., my wife, Lauren, called me crying while I was with my mistress.

"I think I'm in labor."

My heart nearly stopped.

I was getting ready to leave, until I heard my mistress yell in complete pain.

She was also in labor.

I panicked.

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I had to choose who to go with.

I ultimately decided on being with my mistress.

I said to my wife: "I'm sorry, but the office called and I need to go on an emergency business trip. I'll be back as soon as I can."

I got in my car and drove my mistress to the hospital.

I planned to stay for a few hours and then rush to my wife.

Fate had other plans.

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As I ran through the maternity ward after parking my car, I suddenly froze.

Standing at the reception desk was my wife, staring directly at me.

She was clearly in pain, but she needed to walk around to get the labor going.

The color drained from my face.

Then, another voice called my name.

I turned around.

"Ryan!"

It was Ava.

My mistress.

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She was standing in the hallway, one hand pressed against her stomach while a nurse supported her arm.

For a few seconds, nobody moved.

Nobody spoke.

Then, Lauren looked at Ava.

Ava looked at Lauren.

And both women looked at me.

I knew it was over.

Lauren and I had been married for ten years.

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Ten years of building a life together.

At least, that was how it looked from the outside.

The truth was much more complicated.

The first few years of our marriage had been good.

Lauren was smart, patient, and loyal.

She was the kind of woman who remembered birthdays, checked on sick relatives, and volunteered before anyone asked.

I loved her.

At least, I used to.

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Somewhere along the way, things changed.

Life became routine.

Work became stressful.

Conversations became shorter.

Date nights disappeared.

We stopped acting like a couple and started acting like roommates.

One thing never changed, though.

We both wanted children.

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For years, we tried.

Every month brought disappointment.

Every failed pregnancy test felt heavier than the last.

Eventually, we started visiting a fertility clinic.

The appointments became part of our lives.

There were blood tests, consultations, procedures, and long drives home where neither of us knew what to say.

The doctors explained that my fertility was severely impaired.

Natural conception was extremely unlikely.

I hated hearing that.

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I hated feeling like my body had failed us.

So, I stopped talking about it.

Doctors eventually recommended IVF.

Lauren's eggs and my sperm were combined, and several embryos were successfully created and frozen.

Lauren was hopeful.

I wasn't.

I hated every part of it.

I hated the appointments, the paperwork, and the feeling that our future depended on a clinic.

Eventually, I told Lauren I wanted to stop.

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"Natural is the way to go," I said. "If it happens, it happens."

Lauren looked disappointed, but she didn't argue.

At least, not openly.

As the years passed, our marriage grew colder.

Meanwhile, I had been taking pills prescribed by my doctor to try and treat my infertility.

Then, Ava arrived.

She started working in my department.

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She was younger, energetic, and confident.

Being around her made me feel younger too.

At first, it was harmless.

Lunches.

Conversations.

Inside jokes.

Then, one mistake became another.

Before long, I was having an affair.

I justified it constantly.

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I told myself Lauren and I were already distant.

I told myself nobody was getting hurt.

I told myself whatever I needed to believe.

Then one evening, Lauren came home holding a positive pregnancy test.

"My medication must have worked," I thought to myself.

Her hands were shaking.

Her eyes were full of tears.

"We're finally having a baby," she whispered.

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For a moment, nothing else mattered.

I hugged her. I laughed. I cried.

After all those years, it felt like a miracle.

I should have ended my affair that night.

Instead, I continued it.

A few weeks later, Ava asked me to meet her at a diner after work.

The moment I saw her expression, I knew something was wrong.

She slid a small ultrasound picture across the table.

"I'm pregnant."

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I stared at her.

"What?"

She nodded nervously.

"I've taken three tests."

My entire world tilted.

Two women.

Two pregnancies.

One father.

From that moment forward, my life became a nightmare.

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I attended doctor's appointments with both women.

I bought baby clothes for two homes.

I lied about work trips and late meetings.

There were fake conferences, fake clients, and fake emergencies.

The lies multiplied faster than I could manage them.

Every day, I expected everything to collapse.

Somehow, it didn't.

Not until that night.

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Back in the hospital hallway, Lauren's face slowly changed.

Confusion became understanding.

Understanding became devastation.

"You've been cheating on me," she whispered.

I stepped toward her.

"Lauren, please..."

"Don't."

The word cut through me like a knife.

Ava looked horrified.

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"You told me your marriage was basically over."

Lauren laughed bitterly.

"Basically over?"

The women stared at each other.

Then, both realized the truth at the same time.

Neither of them knew about the other.

I had betrayed them both.

Another contraction hit Ava, and a nurse rushed to support her.

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At the same moment, Lauren grabbed the reception desk as pain crossed her face.

Both women were in labor.

Both women were heartbroken.

And both women hated me.

Family members soon arrived, including Lauren's sister, Brooke, and Ava's mother, Denise.

Within minutes, everyone knew exactly what had happened.

The looks they gave me were filled with disgust.

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I deserved every one of them.

Several hours later, both babies were born healthy.

Lauren gave birth to a baby boy.

Ava delivered a baby girl.

For a brief moment, I felt relief.

The babies were safe.

Everyone was safe.

Maybe the worst was over.

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Maybe exposure was my punishment.

Maybe I'd spend years rebuilding what I'd destroyed.

I couldn't have been more wrong.

The following morning, a doctor approached me in the waiting room.

"Ryan, we'd like to discuss something."

Immediately, my stomach tightened.

"Are the babies okay?"

"Both babies are healthy," he replied. "However, there are some medical questions we'd like to clarify."

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A few minutes later, I was sitting in a private office.

The doctor folded his hands.

"We recommend paternity testing."

I frowned.

"Why?"

"Certain blood markers raised questions we'd like to verify."

I almost laughed.

Of all the things happening in my life, paternity wasn't one of my concerns.

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I had no doubt.

Both babies were mine.

Without hesitation, I agreed.

The tests were performed that afternoon.

Three days later, the first result arrived.

And the moment I read it, everything changed.

Lauren's baby was biologically mine.

Relief crashed over me so powerfully I nearly cried.

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My son.

For the first time since the hospital disaster, I felt hope.

Maybe Lauren and I could still fix this.

Maybe we could still be a family.

The moment I learned Lauren's baby was mine, I felt something I hadn't felt in months.

Relief.

Pure relief.

For days, I'd been drowning in guilt, panic, and humiliation.

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Now I had something solid to hold onto.

My son.

Nobody could take that away.

I walked straight to Lauren's room.

She was sitting upright in bed, holding the baby against her chest.

For a moment, I simply stared.

He was beautiful.

Tiny.

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Perfect.

And mine.

Lauren looked up.

The warmth that used to exist between us was gone.

"What do you want?" she asked quietly.

I stepped closer.

"The results came back."

"I know."

I smiled weakly.

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"He's mine."

Lauren didn't react.

"He is."

I pulled a chair closer.

"Lauren, maybe we can still figure this out."

Her eyes narrowed.

"What?"

I leaned forward.

"I made mistakes."

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"Mistakes?" she repeated.

"I screwed up. I know I did. But we have a son now."

She stared at me as if she didn't recognize me.

"Ryan, are you serious?"

"We can go to counseling," I said. "We can rebuild."

The more I spoke, the more hopeful I became.

"We can be a family."

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Lauren let out a short, disbelieving laugh.

"You slept with another woman for nearly a year," she said.

"I know."

"You lied every day."

"I know."

"You abandoned me while I was in labor."

I lowered my eyes.

Then she delivered the sentence that hit hardest.

"And now that you know the baby is biologically yours, suddenly you want your marriage back."

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I opened my mouth.

Nothing came out.

Because she was right.

Part of me had immediately started clinging to the idea that this could still be fixed.

That biology somehow changed everything.

Lauren shook her head.

Before I could answer, a knock came at the door.

A doctor entered.

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His expression was serious.

"We've received the second result."

My stomach tightened.

Ava.

The doctor looked directly at me.

"Would you like to know here, or would you like to step outside?"

"Here is fine," Lauren answered. I nodded.

"You are not the biological father of Ava's child."

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The room went silent.

Then anger exploded inside me.

"What?"

"The test is conclusive."

I stood so quickly that my chair nearly fell over.

"That's impossible."

"It is not," the doctor said calmly.

I stormed out of the room and headed straight for Ava's.

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She looked exhausted.

The baby girl was sleeping in a bassinet beside her bed.

The moment she saw my face, she knew something was wrong.

"What happened?"

I held up the paperwork.

"This happened."

Her eyes scanned the results.

Then her face went pale.

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"No."

"She's not mine."

Ava looked stunned.

"No. That's impossible."

"Who is he?"

"I don't know!"

I laughed bitterly.

"You don't know?"

"I thought it was you!"

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"Thought?"

For the first time, uncertainty appeared in her eyes.

Real uncertainty.

Then a memory seemed to hit her.

Something she'd buried.

Something she'd refused to think about.

"Oh my God."

I stared at her.

"What?"

Ava covered her mouth.

Before she could answer, another voice came from the doorway.

Lauren.

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She stood there holding our son.

She looked tired, but stronger than I'd ever seen her.

She looked at Ava.

Then at me.

Finally, she said the words that changed everything.

"Ryan couldn't have been the father."

Both of us stared at her.

"What are you talking about?" I demanded.

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Lauren's face hardened.

"The fertility clinic."

Ava frowned.

"What fertility clinic?"

Lauren looked directly at me.

"The one that told us years ago that your fertility was severely impaired."

I felt the floor disappear beneath me.

"What?"

"The doctors told us natural conception was extremely unlikely."

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"That's not true."

"It is."

"No."

Lauren's voice sharpened.

"Yes, Ryan."

Ava looked between us, confused.

Lauren continued, "The doctors explained everything, but you didn't want to hear it."

My pulse thundered.

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"We had fertility problems."

"Because of you," I shot back.

Lauren's eyes flashed.

"That was the part you never wanted to admit."

The room fell silent.

For years, I had blamed her.

Not always out loud.

Not always directly.

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But I blamed her.

Every failed pregnancy.

Every disappointment.

Every quiet drive home from the clinic.

Deep down, I had always acted like the problem was Lauren.

She took a shaky breath.

"For years, I sat beside you in appointments while you acted like I was broken."

I couldn't speak.

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"You never wanted to hear anything that challenged your version of reality," she continued.

"So, I carried your pride for you."

The words hurt because they were true.

Then, Lauren revealed the secret she'd carried.

"Do you remember when we created embryos?"

I nodded slowly. "The IVF treatment," I replied.

"We created several and you decided you didn't want to use them."

I nodded.

"You said nature would take care of it," she said.

I swallowed.

Then, she looked down at our son.

"I had one of our frozen embryos implanted anyway."

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The room went completely silent.

My heart pounded.

"What?"

"I couldn't let go of our chance to have a family."

"You used an embryo?"

"Yes."

"Without telling me?"

She nodded.

I sat down heavily.

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The baby wasn't a miracle.

The pregnancy wasn't random.

Lauren had used one of our frozen embryos.

My biological child had been growing inside her all along.

The realization left me speechless.

Then Ava spoke quietly.

"Oh my God."

We both looked at her.

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Tears streamed down her face.

"I know who the father is."

Nobody spoke.

Her voice cracked.

"I convinced myself it wasn't possible."

She looked toward her daughter.

"I wanted it to be Ryan so badly that I stopped thinking about the truth."

The truth finally settled over the room.

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Lauren hadn't cheated.

Ava hadn't knowingly lied from the beginning.

Both pregnancies had been built on secrets.

But only one secret had started everything.

Mine.

The affair.

The lies.

The betrayal.

For the first time, there was nobody left to blame except myself.

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A week later, Lauren filed for divorce.

She didn't hesitate.

She didn't negotiate.

She was done.

Ava ended things too.

Not that there was much left to end.

Within a few months, my entire life was gone.

The marriage.

The affair.

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The future I'd imagined.

Everything.

The divorce became final before our son's first birthday.

I was granted visitation, but it wasn't the life I'd pictured.

Every time I dropped him back at Lauren's house, the consequences felt fresh again.

One afternoon, about a year later, I was walking through a park near my apartment.

That's when I saw them.

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Lauren.

Ava.

And the two children.

They were sitting together on a blanket beneath a large oak tree.

My son was toddling through the grass.

Ava's daughter was chasing bubbles nearby.

The women were laughing.

Actually laughing.

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Not surviving.

Not struggling.

Happy.

For a long moment, I simply stood there.

Watching.

Lauren noticed me first.

Our eyes met.

She didn't look angry anymore.

She didn't look sad.

She simply gave a polite nod.

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Then, she returned her attention to the children.

To her life.

A life that no longer revolved around me.

As I stood there alone, I finally understood something.

For years, I'd believed I was the center of everyone's story.

The husband.

The lover.

The father.

The man holding everything together.

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But I wasn't.

I was the man who broke it apart.

I thought I had destroyed two women's lives.

In the end, I destroyed only my own.

But here is the real question: When you've spent years blaming everyone else for the problems in your life, do you keep searching for someone to hold responsible, or do you finally accept that the consequences you're facing were created by your own choices all along?

If you liked this story, here's another one you might enjoy: A woman missed her best friend's funeral because of a lie her husband made up. She eventually discovers the truth, forcing her to end her marriage and start anew.

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