When my boyfriend dumped me for the one person I trusted most—my own mother—I thought the pain would break me. He believed he could betray me and walk away without facing the consequences. But what he didn’t know was that I had no intention of letting him get away with it.
Travis was never the perfect guy, but he was good enough. Sure, we had our fights, but we always found our way back. I trusted him… or at least I thought I did. When we moved in together, my mom, Linda, would stop by a lot—helping with cooking, cleaning, even decorating.
It felt sweet, maybe a little too much sometimes, but I never thought twice about it. That was just our normal—until everything shattered one random night. I got off work early, excited to spend the evening with Travis.
I stepped into the living room and froze. Travis was there… making out with my mom, his hands all over her waist. We locked eyes.
He just stood there like this wasn’t a big deal. “Rachel, I didn’t want you to find out like this.”
Linda crossed her arms. “You always make everything a crisis. Travis deserves someone who listens to him. Maybe if you had been more of a woman, this wouldn’t have happened”
It felt like a punch to the gut. I looked at him like he was a stranger. I grabbed his coat from the chair and threw it at him. “Get out. Both of you.”
The nausea started two days later. When I got sick for the third time that morning, I tried six pregnancy tests and all of them showed two lines. I was pregnant with Travis’s child.
I waited three more days before I told him. That evening, he showed up at my door. Over the next week, Travis kept showing up like nothing had happened. He talked about baby clothes and cribs like we were a normal couple.
I didn’t understand what he was doing or why he was trying. But I didn’t stop him.
Then one evening, my mom called. “Hi, sweetheart. Just wanted to let you know—I’m pregnant too. And I planned it. I knew you’d try to pull him back so I made sure he’d stay with me.”
That night, Travis walked in like he always did. He let out a breath. “I don’t know what to do. I didn’t sign up for two kids. I’m just saying… maybe this doesn’t have to be so complicated. You have options.”
I walked to the door and pulled it open. “Get out. Now.”
Travis left, slamming the door so hard the walls seemed to shake. I cried for everything—the man I thought loved me and the mother who had turned into a stranger.
I wrote a letter and drove to Linda’s house. My plan was simple—leave the letter and walk away. But when I opened the door, Travis was there, dragging a suitcase down the hall.
I walked straight past him and pulled the suitcase open. Right on top were two plane tickets. I grabbed them and held them up. “Plane tickets?” I said. “You’re running away.”
Travis rubbed his face. He looked tired. “I can’t deal with this anymore. Linda won’t stop talking about the baby. She keeps asking about names, nursery colors, everything. I feel trapped.”
Without saying anything, I ripped the tickets in half. I pulled out my phone. “Linda, your perfect man is standing here with a suitcase and a ticket out of your life.”
I said to Travis. “You’ll hear from my lawyer. You’re paying for both children. Whether you like it or not.”
As I drove home, the tight feeling in my chest began to fade. The pain was still there, but it wasn’t crushing me anymore. I didn’t know what kind of mother I would become. I had no plan, no clear answers. But I knew one thing for sure—I would never again let someone make me feel small or unworthy.