Part3: My hubby grabbed our baby for the first time, then yelled, “This is not my child, I need a DNA test!”

Just after noon, the doctor walked in holding a folder.

Dr. Karen Patel didn’t look dramatic—just tired, like someone who had delivered difficult news to families before.

Nina stood beside her, posture rigid.

And near the doorway, a hospital security officer lingered quietly, pretending not to listen.

Ethan jumped to his feet. “Finally,” he said sharply. “Read it.”

My mother, who had insisted on being present, squeezed my shoulder. Addison slept against my chest, warm and unaware of the tension filling the room.

Dr. Patel looked toward me first. “Ms. Miller, are you comfortable continuing with everyone here?”

“Yes,” I said. “Please.”

Ethan let out a harsh laugh. “Of course she is.”

Dr. Patel opened the folder. “The paternity analysis indicates a 99.99% probability that Mr. Ethan Miller is the biological father.”

For a brief moment, silence filled the room—so complete it felt unreal.

Then Ethan’s face twisted.

Not with relief.

Not with regret.

With fury.

“That’s a lie,” he snapped. “It’s wrong. Do it again.”

Dr. Patel remained calm. “The test is conclusive.”

Ethan’s gaze snapped toward Nina. “You tampered with it.”

Nina’s jaw tightened. “No.”

Ethan suddenly stepped toward the bassinet as if he intended to grab something—grab her—take control.

Dr. Patel raised her hand. “Mr. Miller, stop where you are.”

He ignored her.

He reached past me, his fingers stretching toward Addison.

I instinctively turned my body to shield her. “Don’t touch her,” I said, my voice trembling now.

His face flushed red. “You think you win because of a piece of paper?” he shouted. “You’re smiling again—see? Guilty people smile!”

“I’m not smiling,” I said. “I’m breathing.”

Dr. Patel’s voice cut sharply through the chaos.

“Security!”

The officer stationed at the door moved instantly, stepping between Ethan and me. Another guard appeared moments later, his radio crackling as the situation escalated. The room filled with tense but controlled urgency.

Ethan pointed at me as though I were the criminal. “She set this up! She—”

“Sir,” the officer said firmly, “step back.”

Ethan jerked away but quickly turned toward Dr. Patel. “Tell them! Tell them she cheated!”

Dr. Patel didn’t react. “The results show you are the father,” she repeated. “And there is an additional matter.”

Ethan froze. “What matter?”

Nina opened a second, thinner folder—printed documents neatly organized.

“Yesterday,” Nina said steadily, “you attempted to enter the lab corridor without authorization. We also reviewed security footage after you raised concerns about ‘tampering.’”

Ethan’s eyes widened.

Dr. Patel continued calmly. “The recordings show you approaching restricted staff areas and attempting to speak privately with a lab technician. Hospital policy requires us to report suspected interference with medical testing.”

Ethan’s mouth opened, then shut again.

The confidence drained from his face the way glass cracks—sudden and irreversible.

“I didn’t—” he began.

The officer’s radio chirped. “Administration is on the line.”

My heart pounded, but beneath the fear another feeling settled in—clear and cold. Ethan had never wanted the truth.

He wanted leverage.

If the baby wasn’t his, he would abandon us.

If she was his, he would twist reality until he escaped responsibility anyway.

Dr. Patel looked directly at him. “You demanded this test. You threatened your wife while she was recovering. And now you’re escalating inside a hospital room.”

Ethan’s voice dropped, suddenly desperate. “I just… I just needed to be sure.”

I stared at him.

“No,” I said quietly. “You needed an excuse.”

The security officer guided him toward the door. Ethan kept turning his head to look back at me, like he expected me to chase after him—to beg, to fix things.

I didn’t move.

Because for the first time since Addison was born, the room finally felt safe.

Later that same day, with help from the hospital social worker, I filed for a temporary protective order. I sent the screenshots to my attorney. And I wrote a sentence I never imagined writing:

Any contact must go through counsel.

Ethan entered our daughter’s life with an accusation and a threat.

He left the hospital stunned—not by the DNA results…

…but by the fact that the truth refused to bend to his version of the story.

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