usa-goat.com
  • Stories
  • Funny jokes
  • Healthy
  • Blog
  • More
    • Blog
    • Contact
    • Search Page
Notification
usa-goat.comusa-goat.com
Font ResizerAa
  • HomeHome
  • My Feed
  • My Interests
  • My Saves
  • History
Search
  • Quick Access
    • Home
    • Contact Us
    • Blog Index
    • History
    • My Saves
    • My Interests
    • My Feed
  • Categories
    • Funny jokes
    • Blog
    • Stories
    • Healthy

Top Stories

Explore the latest updated news!

My Daughter Smirked And Said She Had Transferred T…

5k 99

After Two Years Without My Twins I Was Called to Save One of Them but the Results Stunned the Doctor

3k 81

“I Cleared My Husband’s $300,000 Debt — But What He Said Next Shattered Everything I Thought I Knew About Him.”

9k 74

Stay Connected

Find us on socials
248.1kFollowersLike
61.1kFollowersFollow
165kSubscribersSubscribe
Made by viralstoryteller.com
Stories

I Paid a Fortune Teller’s Bus Fare—The Note She Gave Me Unraveled a Devastating Truth

9.2k 32
Share
SHARE

Trust me. Pain brings truth. And truth brings peace.”

Before I could respond, the driver yelled again for me to move, so I kept going.

I shoved the note into my pocket and forgot about it—at least for the moment. The pediatrician’s office was loud with the sounds of crying kids and tired parents. Maya had drifted off again, her tiny body limp in the stroller.

“Mr. Carter?” a nurse called. I followed her to the exam room.

After checking Maya in, I sank into a chair, my body begging for rest. That’s when I remembered the note. I unfolded it.

“SHE’S NOT YOUR DAUGHTER.”

The words hit like a car crash. I read it again. And again.

No. No, that couldn’t be. It had to be a mistake.

Some cryptic nonsense. Some sick joke. But her eyes.

Her eyes were Rachel’s. A knock at the door pulled me back. “The doctor’s ready for you,” the nurse said with a smile.

“She’s got your eyes.”

My smile faltered. The words stung now. Over the next few days, the note gnawed at me like rot under floorboards.

No matter how I tried to brush it off, it kept whispering. Until one night, against every instinct I had, I ordered a DNA kit. I hated myself for it.

“This is insane,” I muttered, hovering over the confirmation email. “She’s mine. I know she’s mine.”

Maya cried from her crib.

I rushed in and picked her up. She clung to me. “I’m here, peanut.

Daddy’s here.”

A week later, the results arrived. I stared at the envelope like it was ticking. I opened it.

Not a match. The floor fell out from under me. I ended up on the kitchen tile, holding the paper like it was evidence in a crime I hadn’t realized I was part of.

“Da-da,” Maya babbled from her high chair, smearing food across her face like nothing had changed. But everything had. I drove to Helen’s house—Rachel’s mother.

She opened the door with her usual warmth, but her smile faded as soon as she saw my face. “What happened?” she asked. I walked inside and dropped the DNA report on her coffee table.

“Did you know?”

She looked down. Her silence was answer enough. “Jesus, Helen… how long?”

“She told me,” she whispered.

“Before she died. She… she made a mistake. A one-time mistake.”

I sank onto the couch, heart in my throat.

“She wasn’t sure if the baby was yours. She said she’d tell you, but… she died before she could.”

“So you lied?” I asked, my voice breaking. “You watched me raise this child, watched me grieve and build a life around her, and said nothing?”

Tears streamed down her face.

“Rachel was scared. But she loved you. And she wanted you to be Maya’s father.”

“She got what she wanted,” I said, barely holding it together.

“But what about what I wanted? What about the truth?”

“She’s still your daughter, Caleb. In every way that counts.”

I couldn’t answer.

I walked out. That night, I sat beside Maya’s crib for hours. I watched her sleep, watched her hand curl around her stuffed elephant.

I remembered the way she’d curled into my chest as a newborn, the way she giggled at my terrible dancing, the way she said “Da-da” like it was the only word she ever needed. Was it all a lie? Or was it love?

I reached for her hand. “You’re not mine,” I whispered. “Not by blood.

But… I raised you. I stayed. I loved.

That counts. That has to count.”

She stirred and smiled in her sleep. “I choose you, Maya.

Every day. I don’t care what that paper says. I’m your dad.

And I always will be.”

And in that moment, the note didn’t matter anymore. Because sometimes, family isn’t made in a hospital room or written in DNA. Sometimes, it’s forged in sleepless nights, bottle feeds, bedtime stories, and unconditional love.

Madam Vega was right—truth hurts. But it also heals. And no truth could ever change how fiercely I loved that little girl.

“Sweet dreams, baby girl,” I whispered, brushing a kiss on her forehead. “Your daddy’s right here.”

Previous12
Stories

My Daughter Smirked And Said She Had Transferred T…

5k 99
Stories

After Two Years Without My Twins I Was Called to Save One of Them but the Results Stunned the Doctor

3k 81
Stories

“I Cleared My Husband’s $300,000 Debt — But What He Said Next Shattered Everything I Thought I Knew About Him.”

9k 74
Stories

Every Day She Brought Sand Across The Border—Until Guards Learned Why

6.4k 88

usa-goat.com is the blog where emotions meet laughter! Discover touching stories that stay with you and jokes that will have you laughing to tears. Every post is handpicked to entertain, move, and brighten your day.

  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conidition
  • Adverts
  • Our Jobs
  • Term of Use

Made by usa-goat.com

adbanner
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?