Instead, I planned something else.
I booked a venue and told her we were throwing a gender reveal party. She loved the idea—didn’t question it at all.
That alone told me something was very wrong.
At ten weeks, you can’t reliably know the baby’s gender.
But she went along with everything.
I invited both our families. Friends. Made it look real.
And quietly, I prepared the truth.
I even went back to my doctor—just to confirm what I already knew.
On the day of the event, everything looked perfect.
People arrived, laughing, taking pictures.
Stephanie walked in last, dressed in white, smiling like she had already won.
She kissed my cheek. “This is beautiful.”
I nodded.
“It will be.”
When it was time, everyone gathered around the cake.
Phones out. Smiles ready.
I picked up the microphone.
“Before we find out the baby’s gender,” I said, “there’s something else everyone needs to see.”
The room went quiet.
Behind her, the screen lit up.
She turned slowly—and the color drained from her face.
I explained everything. Calmly.
The diagnosis. The procedure. The fact that I couldn’t have children.
Then I showed the proof.
Medical reports. Dates. Facts.
Gasps filled the room.
Stephanie panicked. “What are you doing?”
I didn’t stop.
“I also don’t know if she’s even pregnant,” I added.
That’s when the room shifted completely.
Then I revealed the rest.
The messages.
Her words. Her plans. Her betrayal.
Clear. Impossible to deny.
People stared. Whispered. Reacted.
Her parents looked shocked. Mine said nothing.
And then—
The man from her messages walked in.
He froze when he saw the crowd.
I pointed.
“That’s the one she’s really been seeing.”
Silence exploded into chaos.
He turned and left almost immediately.
She tried to stop me.
“Turn it off!” she begged.
“Then explain it,” I said.
She couldn’t.
I walked to the cake.
Cut it open.
Not pink. Not blue.
Inside was an image.
Her—and him.
Framed in a heart.
With a message mocking everything she had tried to build.
People gasped.
Some turned away.
Others just stared.
I stepped back to the mic. “I’m ending the engagement.”
Her voice broke. She begged.
I stayed calm.
“You can keep the ring,” I said. “Looks like you’ll need it.”
No one laughed.
No one moved.
I placed the mic down.
And walked away.
Outside, the air felt different.
Lighter.
My phone kept buzzing.
I didn’t check it.
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