My Ex Left Me and Our Son for a Rich Man – 10 Years Later, She Invited Me to Her Wedding, So I Hired an Actress to Pretend to Be My Wife

My Ex Left Me and Our Son for a Rich Man – 10 Years Later, She Invited Me to Her Wedding, So I Hired an Actress to Pretend to Be My Wife

When my ex-wife invited me to her wedding, I knew exactly why she wanted our son there. What I didn’t expect was how far I’d go to keep her from humiliating us again, or that the woman I hired for one fake night would see through everything the second we arrived.

When Monica’s message lit up my phone, I stopped breathing for a second.

I was standing in my kitchen, rinsing spaghetti sauce off a plate while my ten-year-old son, Liam, sat at the table with his homework spread around him. My phone buzzed again. Her name stayed there on the screen, bright and ugly.

I opened it.

There it was. The real reason.

“I’d like to invite you to my wedding. Bring our son with you. It would mean a lot if we could show everyone there’s no bad blood. How will I look in front of my fiancé’s family if my own son isn’t there with me, right?”

I read it twice.

There it was. The real reason.

Not Liam.

Not me.

“She wants us at her wedding.”

How will I look.

Liam looked up from his math sheet.

“Was that Mom?”

“Yeah,” I said.

“What does she want?”

“She wants us at her wedding.”

He didn’t ask if she missed him.

He stared at me.

“Why?”

“Because she wants to look good in front of people,” I said.

He looked back down at his worksheet.

“That’s dumb.”

“Yeah,” I said. “It is.”

I thought hard work could fix anything.

He didn’t ask if she missed him.

He had stopped asking that years ago.

Monica and I got married right after college.

Back then, I thought love meant choosing each other and keeping that promise.

I thought hard work could fix anything.

I thought loyalty was obvious.

He was one month old when Monica packed two suitcases and left.

I came from nothing. Real nothing. The kind where your parents count cash on the kitchen table before deciding whether groceries or the electric bill matters more that week. The kind where new shoes mean somebody worked extra hours or went without.

After college, I worked every job I could get. Warehouse shifts, delivery runs, weekend landscaping, night inventory. I slept four hours some weeks.

Then Liam was born.

He was one month old when Monica packed two suitcases and left.

“How could a woman like me stay with someone like you?”

Liam asleep against my chest. Monica by the door in a coat too expensive for our hallway.

“Monica, please,” I said. “Whatever this is, we can work it out.”

She looked at me like I had tracked mud across her floor.

“You can’t fix being you.”

She gave a short laugh.

“You’re broke. Look at yourself in the mirror. How could a woman like me stay with someone like you?”

I should have told her no and blocked the number.

For the next ten years, I raised Liam by myself.

I should have ignored her wedding invitation.

I should have told her no and blocked the number.

Instead, I made the mistake of imagining that day. Monica greeting us in front of her fiancé’s family. Looking me over. Seeing my old truck. Seeing the suit I only wore to funerals and job interviews. Seeing Liam beside me and acting like she had always been a mother.

I could survive Monica making me feel small again.

I hired an actress to pretend to be my wife.

I couldn’t survive Liam watching it happen.

That night, after Liam went to bed, I sat alone on the couch and did something I never thought I would do in my life.

I hired an actress to pretend to be my wife.

Two days later, Susan came to my house.

“So,” she said, setting her bag down, “tell me about the ex-wife.”

“What is her full name?” she asked.

“I think I’ve heard that name before.”

“Monica.”

Her pen stopped.

She looked up.

“Monica? Is this her last name?”

“Yeah. Why?”

She tapped the pen once against the page.

He froze when he saw her.

“I think I’ve heard that name before.”

Then Liam came in.

He froze when he saw her.

Susan stood and held out her hand.

“I’m Susan.”

He looked at her hand, then at me.

Susan did not blink.

“Is she the fake wife?”

Susan did not blink.

“Temporary role,” she said. “Low budget. Emotionally demanding.”

Liam stared at her another second, then shook her hand.

“Okay.”

Susan sat back down.

Ten years ago, Monica told me I could not fix being me.

“You want to ask me anything?” she said.

He shrugged.

“Can you act like you like my dad?”

She smiled.

“I don’t think that part will be hard.”

Ten years ago, Monica told me I could not fix being me.

“He’s protective of you.”

Susan had just made it sound like being me was not something broken.

Susan watched him go.

“He’s protective of you.”

“He shouldn’t have to be.”

“But he is,” she said quietly.

The wedding was at a country club outside the city, the kind of place with white stone columns, trimmed hedges, and people who smiled at you while deciding your value in under five seconds.

“If you leave now, you’ll think about it for years.”

I almost turned the truck around in the parking lot.

Susan touched my arm.

“If you leave now, you’ll think about it for years.”

Liam leaned between the front seats.

“Let’s just get it over with.”

So we went in.

 

 

NEXT

 

 

WordPress Cookie Notice by Real Cookie Banner