Skip to content

Foodly

  • Sample Page

I Raised My Twin Sons All Alone – but When They Turned 16, They Came Home from Their College Program and Told Me They Wanted Nothing More to Do with Me

articleUseronMay 8, 2026

An emotional young woman standing outside | Source: Midjourney

“Stop,” Liam said sharply, now standing. “You’re saying he lied, sure. But how do we know you’re not the one who’s lying?”

I flinched. It broke my heart to hear that my own sons doubt me. I didn’t know what Evan had told them, but it had to have been convincing enough for them to think I was lying.

It was as if Noah could read my mind.

An emotional woman wearing a uniform | Source: Midjourney

Advertisement

“Mom, he said unless you go to his office soon and agree to what he wants, he’ll get us expelled. He’ll ruin our chances at college. He said it’s all good and well to be a part of these programs, but the real deal will come when we get accepted full-time.”

“And… what… what exactly does he want, boys?”

“He wants to play happy family. He said you took away 16 years of knowing us,” Liam said. “And he’s trying to get appointed to some state education board. He thinks that if you agree to pretend to be his wife, we’ll all win something from this. There’s a banquet that he wants us to attend.”

A frustrated teenage boy | Source: Midjourney

Advertisement

I couldn’t speak. I just sat there, the weight of 16 years pressing against my chest. It was like being punched in the chest… not just for the absurdity but the sheer cruelty of it.

I looked at my sons — their eyes so guarded, their shoulders heavy with fear and betrayal. I took a deep breath, held it, and then let it go.

“Boys,” I said. “Look at me.”

A teenage boy wearing a navy sweater | Source: Midjourney

They both did. Hesitant and hopeful.

Advertisement

“I would burn the entire education board to the ground before I let that man own us. Do you really think I’d have kept your father away from you on purpose? HE left us. I didn’t leave him. He chose this, not me.”

Liam blinked slowly. Something flickered behind his eyes — a flicker of the boy who used to curl beside me with scraped knees and a racing heart.

“Mom,” he whispered. “Then what do we do?”

“We’ll agree to his terms, boys. And then we’ll expose him when the pretense matters the most.”

The morning of the banquet, I picked up an extra shift at the diner. I needed to keep moving. If I sat too long, I’d spiral.

A determined woman sitting on a couch | Source: Midjourney

Advertisement

The boys were sitting in the corner booth, homework spread out between them — Noah with his earbuds in, Liam scribbling across his notebook like he was racing someone. I topped off their orange juices and gave them both a tight smile.

“You don’t have to stay here, you know,” I said gently.

“We want to, Mom,” Noah replied, tugging out one earbud. “We said we’d meet him here anyway, remember?”

Glasses of orange juice on a table | Source: Midjourney

I did remember. I just didn’t want to.

Advertisement

A few minutes later, the bell above the door jingled. Evan walked in like he owned the place, in a designer coat, polished shoes, and a smile that made my stomach turn.

He slid into the booth across from the boys like he belonged there. I stayed behind the counter for a moment, watching. Liam’s body stiffened, and Noah wouldn’t look at him.

A frowning man standing in a diner | Source: Midjourney

I walked over with a pot of coffee, holding it like a shield.

“I didn’t order that rubbish, Rachel,” Evan said, not even glancing at me.

Advertisement

“You didn’t have to,” I replied. “You’re not here for coffee. You’re here to make a deal with me and my sons.”

“You always did have a sharp… tongue, Rachel,” he said, chuckling as he reached for a sugar packet.

A woman wearing a waitress uniform | Source: Midjourney

I ignored the jab.

“We’ll do it. The banquet. The photo ops. Whatever. But make no mistake, Evan. I’m doing this for my sons. Not you.”

“Of course you are,” he said. His eyes met mine, smug and unreadable.

Advertisement

He stood and grabbed a chocolate chip muffin from the display case, peeling a five-dollar bill from his wallet like he was doing us a favor.

A chocolate chip muffin | Source: Midjourney

“See you tonight, family,” he said, smirking as he walked out. “Wear something nice.”

“He’s loving this,” Noah said, exhaling slowly.

“He thinks he’s already won.” Liam frowned, looking at me.

“Let him think it,” I said. “He’s got another thing coming.”

Advertisement

« Previous Next »

We Were Orphans Who Built a Life Together—Until a Stranger Knocked and Revealed My Husband’s Hidden Past –

I Became a Mother at 17 – Years Later, My Son Took a DNA Test to Find His Father but Uncovered a Truth That Left Me Weak in the Knees

My Husband Constantly Goes on Business Trips for Work – One Day I Followed Him and Discove…

My husband boarded a flight to Cancun with his mistress… never imagining that the wife he looked down on would be serving him revenge in first class

I never told my parents I was a federal judge. To them, I was still “the loser”… until my sister took my car, caused an acc!dent, and left. My mother grabbed my shoulders and yelled, “Say you were driving!”

I Married a Widower With Two Little Girls – One Day, One of Them Asked Me, ‘Do You Want to See Where My Mom Lives?’ and Led Me to the Basement Door

Recent Posts

  • We Were Orphans Who Built a Life Together—Until a Stranger Knocked and Revealed My Husband’s Hidden Past –
  • I Became a Mother at 17 – Years Later, My Son Took a DNA Test to Find His Father but Uncovered a Truth That Left Me Weak in the Knees
  • My Husband Constantly Goes on Business Trips for Work – One Day I Followed Him and Discove…
  • My husband boarded a flight to Cancun with his mistress… never imagining that the wife he looked down on would be serving him revenge in first class
  • I never told my parents I was a federal judge. To them, I was still “the loser”… until my sister took my car, caused an acc!dent, and left. My mother grabbed my shoulders and yelled, “Say you were driving!”

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

Archives

  • June 2026
  • May 2026
  • April 2026

Categories

  • Uncategorized
Proudly powered by WordPress | Theme: Justread by GretaThemes.