The moment I understood my marriage might not endure wasn’t when my husband brought up a DNA test.
It was when he said he wanted one because his friend “raised some valid questions.”
That was the line that tore the room wide open.
We were in our kitchen in suburban Columbus, Ohio, on a Thursday night in early September. I had just finished packing lunches for the next morning. Our twins, Ava and Eli, both seven, were upstairs arguing over whose turn it was to feed the fish.
My husband, Nathan, stood by the refrigerator with his phone in one hand and that tight, overly composed expression people wear when they know they are about to say something offensive and want credit for saying it gently.
“Don’t get upset,” he said.
He set his phone on the counter. “Derek thinks we should do a DNA test. Just to put things to rest.”
For a second, I truly thought I had misheard him.
“Put what to rest?”
He ran a hand through his hair.
“He just thinks… with the timing back then, and how much you were traveling for work, and the twins not really looking like me—”
I stared at him.
Nathan and I had been married ten years. The twins were conceived after a brutal year of fertility treatments, hormone injections, specialist visits, and one miscarriage so early almost no one knew except Nathan and me. I had sat in cold clinics while he held my coat.
He had signed every consent form. He had cried when we heard two heartbeats. And now, after all that, he stood in our kitchen asking me to prove I hadn’t cheated because his drinking buddy had decided my children’s faces were suspicious.
“Nathan,” I said very quietly, “are you accusing me of something?”
He had the nerve to look uncomfortable.
“No.
I’m saying if there’s nothing to hide, then why not just do it and end the conversation?”
That was when the temperature in my body seemed to drop all at once.
Because there it was. Not exactly doubt. Something worse.
Weakness. The kind that borrows another man’s paranoia and brings it home like evidence.
I looked at him and said, “If you really do this, I want a divorce.”
He blinked. “You can’t be serious.”
“I am completely serious.”
He let out a disbelieving laugh.
“Over a test?”
“No,” I said. “Over what the test means.”
Upstairs, one of the twins ran across the hallway. I could hear their footsteps overhead.
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