I hadn’t ordered a cake. That was my first thought when the delivery man appeared at the door holding a white box. “Delivery for Tom Parker,” he said. Odd. I’d already baked Tom’s favorite chocolate hazelnut torte myself. Still, I took the mystery box into the kitchen, where guests laughed, kids ran after the dog, and my husband beamed like the picture of perfection. I caught his eye and held up the box. He shrugged. “No idea. Maybe someone sent it?”
Curious, I lifted the lid. Inside was a pristine white cake with elegant lettering that read: “Happy Birthday, Daddy! From your other princess.” The room fell silent. My hands went cold. “What does that mean?” I asked, my voice trembling. Tom’s face drained of color. “I—I don’t know. Maybe a joke.” But before he could say more, the blonde from the pool walked in, calm and uninvited. “It’s not a joke, Tom,” she said, dropping an envelope onto the table. “You said you’d tell her after the pool. That’s the paternity test, in case you deny her.”
I unfolded the paper with shaking fingers: Tom Parker — Probability of Paternity: 99.98%. The laughter, the music, everything vanished. Friends quietly slipped out as I locked myself in the bedroom. Tom begged at the door, voice cracking. “It was a mistake, just once—” “That wasn’t a mistake,” I snapped. “That’s a secret child you hid while I planned your party and believed in you.”
That night, I left—with Max, our loyal dog, padding behind me like he understood. Later, I learned it hadn’t been once. The affair had lasted over a year, and he’d been supporting them in secret. I filed for divorce. Tom lost everything—his job, his family, his respect.
As for me? I rebuilt. I painted a small studio, took freelance work, adopted another dog, and learned to smile again. That cake had cost $30—but it gave me back my freedom.