I met Owen Wade in college, and we started dating after graduation.
My paycheck after graduation was pretty slim. I was barely getting by, and the best I could afford was renting a place in a half-finished building.
Owen and I worked at the same company, and he’d drive me home after work every day. He’d always get me a little something on holidays, and even if he couldn’t swing that, he’d at least take me out for tacos.
I grew up without parents, money, or connections—just Grandma to lean on. People talked behind me when I was a kid, saying I was just some stray kid Grandma took in, but I never believed them.
After she passed, I lost the only family I had. Since then, I’d longed for a place I could call home.
Since I didn’t get much love or attention growing up, I started leaning on Owen more and more. When we were dating, he was sweet, thoughtful, and always careful with my feelings.
He never judged my family or where I came from. I was young then and mistook that basic kindness for love. When he proposed, he promised me we’d have a happy future, and I was thrilled to marry him.
But after we got engaged, his relatives started whispering in his mother, Mildred Manning’s ear. They called me a gold digger trying to marry up and a nobody with a sketchy past.
Some even hinted I might have some “infectious illness” and pushed for me to get a checkup before the wedding.
I sighed, deciding to take it all in silence for Owen’s sake.
When the results came in, I found out he had congenital necrospermia, which meant he couldn’t father children, and there was no cure.
I cherished our relationship and loved him deeply, so I kept it a secret to spare his feelings. I wanted us to have a good life together.
Back then, I believed that as long as we loved each other, it didn’t matter if we couldn’t have kids. If we really wanted a family, we could always adopt.
But while I thought that way, others didn’t.
After Owen and I married, Mildred kept making things tough for me. She started by pressuring me to quit my job, have kids, and be a housewife.
I pushed back at first, but then Owen got on board, asking me to do the same. Besides, he started treating me even better and promised he’d bring in the money while I just kicked back at home.