A few weeks ago, my husband Stan and his mistress tried to kick me out of my own house. This house is mine; I funded every piece of it through my business, which I built from the ground up. Stan never contributed a dime to the mortgage or bills. Imagine my shock when his mistress showed up, claiming she was moving in with their baby because Stan said we were separated.
“Stan told me everything. You two are separated. He said I could move in until we get our place,” she said. I firmly told her to leave, but she refused, saying she had nowhere else to go. Stan had lied, claiming he owned half of my company and everything else.
She even called my mother-in-law, who supported her. “Stan deserves his share!” my mother-in-law insisted. I clarified that Stan and I were only in a common-law marriage, so there was nothing to share.
I took the baby’s bottle for a DNA test. The results confirmed the baby wasn’t Stan’s. I sent Stan the report, stating, “It means you’ve been played.” There was no response.
Later, my mother-in-law apologized, realizing Stan’s deception. I felt a weight lift as I reclaimed my peace. My house and life were mine again.