And then Mason snapped.
“Are you kidding me?!” he barked. His voice cut through the silence like a whip!
The next second, he exploded! His arm swung, grabbing the cake and chucking it across the yard. Frosting rained down on our stunned guests! I stood there, shocked and speechless like the rest of them!
I gasped when my daughters’ cries broke me out of my daze! Olivia’s eyes were wide and wet. Lyla clung to my leg, whimpering.
“I don’t have time for this!” Mason’s voice was a low, furious growl. “Another girl? Another girl?!”
My heart pounded. “What the hell is wrong with you?!”
But he didn’t answer. He was already turning, already stalking past the shocked faces of our guests—and his own daughters—without a glance back.
“I don’t have time for another girl!” he spat over his shoulder.
And then he was gone.
My husband didn’t come back that night. Or the next. His phone went to voicemail. My texts went unanswered. I didn’t sleep, torn between anger and fear.
On the third day, panic swallowed my pride and decided to reach out for help. I sent a video of the reveal, Mason’s outburst, and my daughters’ tears to his family’s patriarch, Thomas. Along with one desperate message:
Mason’s gone. He left me pregnant with our three young daughters. I don’t know what to do. Please, help me.
His response was immediate. My phone rang, and I fumbled to answer.
“Jules,” my FIL’s voice was steady, but I heard the tension beneath. “I’m sorry. I had no idea he would—” He paused, then, firmly: “No matter what happens with that foolish son of mine, you and those girls will never be left wanting.”
A notification popped up even as we spoke. Thomas had transferred a large sum of money into my account!
My throat tightened. “But why? Why are you helping us this way—”
“You and those children are my family, Jules. And unlike Mason, I know the difference between legacy and love.”
His words, simple as they were, shattered something inside me. I choked on a sob. “Thank you,” I whispered.
Weeks passed. I tried to hold myself together for the girls, but every day felt like I was walking through fog. I had no answers. Just silence.
Until I found him.
I was running errands one afternoon when I saw him, Mason, at a baby store. For a moment, I stupidly hoped he was buying something for our kids.
But I was wrong.
I followed him to the checkout line. And when I saw what he was buying, my heart just sank.
It was a blue baby boy’s crib!
I thought that was the worst of it until I noticed that he wasn’t alone!
A young woman, pretty, glowing, and very pregnant, hovered by his side. She laughed at something he said, then leaned in and kissed him on the lips.
My pulse roared in my ears. My feet moved before my brain caught up.
“So this is why,” I said, my voice slicing the air. Mason’s head whipped around, and his eyes met mine.
His mouth curled into something between a sneer and a smirk. “Well, well,” he drawled. “Jules.”
My voice shook with rage. “This is why you left me? Me and your three daughters?”
The woman’s smile slipped, confusion flickering across her face. “Wait… who is this?” she asked.
I ignored her, my eyes burning into Mason. “You couldn’t handle another girl, so you ran off to find someone who’d give you a boy? Thank God your father is a much kinder and responsible person than you are! I told him everything, and he helped me.”
The woman’s face paled. She took a half-step back. “You’re married?” she demanded, her voice sharp with betrayal.
Mason’s smirk only deepened. “You know nothing, Jules,” he said coolly. “If you’d had a son, we could have had it all.”
My fists clenched. “What the hell are you talking about?!”
His eyes flashed with something cruel and smug. “My father,” he said, slow and deliberate, “the man you praise so much, promised the lion’s share of his estate—everything—to whoever gave him the first grandson.”
My stomach dropped.
“So you didn’t leave because of me,” I whispered, horror dawning. “You left because you thought I couldn’t make you rich.”
He spread his arms in mock regret. “What can I say? Bloodline matters.”
I felt sick. My daughters, his daughters, were nothing to him! Nothing but missed opportunities!
That’s when the complete truth came out.
For Thomas, legacy was everything. The old man made it clear that his vast inheritance, millions in property, businesses, and stocks, would go to whichever of his children first produced a grandson. Not a grandchild. A grandson.
He often reminded his children: “Boys carry the bloodline forward. Girls are just another man’s future.” Disgusting, I know.
Mason hadn’t just wanted a boy. He’d guaranteed himself one. He had been having an affair with the young woman for a while. An ultrasound confirmed she was carrying his son, his precious heir.
That’s why he walked out during the gender reveal party. In his mind, my daughters and I were obsolete.
But the story didn’t end there.
I needed answers from Thomas.
I called my FIL and asked for a meeting. When I arrived at his estate, he greeted me with a heavy sigh and a tired, knowing look. We sat in his study, having tea, and I told him what happened with Mason, asking if it was true.
“Yes,” he said before I could finish. “It’s true. I set a condition. The first grandson inherits everything.”
My hands curled into fists. “So you created this mess?”
His eyes flashed with something dark. “I thought I was motivating my children because I need a grandson to carry the family name,” he said, his voice low, bitter. “I didn’t realize I was breeding greed.”
He paused, then his lips pressed tight with disgust. “But Mason… he’s a fool that went too far. And I don’t reward fools. He doesn’t deserve anything!”
I left feeling both confused and vindicated. Thomas was patriarchal, but he wasn’t cruel. He was sensible. At least.
Three weeks later, Mason proposed to his pregnant mistress after serving me with divorce papers, his ticket to fortune, he thought. I heard about their grand engagement from whispers and social media.
But fate, as it turned out, had a wicked sense of humor.
Because when my time came—when I lay in that hospital room, clutching my mother’s hand—life delivered its final twist!
The nurse’s voice was soft but clear.
“Congratulations,” she said. “You have a healthy baby boy!”
My ultrasound had been wrong!
Two months later, my doorbell rang.
I opened it to find Mason. His suit was wrinkled, his face hollow, his eyes red-rimmed.
“Jules…” he rasped. “I… I lost everything.”
I crossed my arms. “What happened?” I asked, though I already knew.
His voice cracked. “My father. He… he disowned me. He gave everything… to you.”
My heart pounded, but my voice stayed cool. “To me?”
His eyes, frantic and desperate, searched mine. “I—I didn’t know… You—you had a boy?” His voice broke. “Jules—”
I cut him off. “I do. But you… you have nothing.”
His knees buckled. “Please,” he begged, “I love you. I love our girls—”
I felt Everly’s little hand slip into mine. She looked up at him, frowning.
I squeezed her hand.
And I closed the door.
Because my family—Olivia, Lyla, Everly, and my son, Thomas Jr.—deserved better than the man on the other side.
And we were finally free.