My husband spoiled me for 34 years… until my brother-in-law donated blood and I uncovered his secret. I was shocked, laughing through tears.
The day I became his wife, his family was still poor. Yet he managed to gather the full dowry and came to claim me, under the startled and jealous eyes of many girls in the village. I thought I was lucky to marry such a handsome man, but once we lived together, I discovered he was endlessly gentle and considerate. He spoiled me like a little girl, keeping me in the bliss of our wedding days.
But every marriage, sooner or later, bears scars. My mother-in-law had four sons; he was the second-born, yet nearly every burden—carrying loads, repairing the house, taking her to doctors—fell on his shoulders. At first, I admired his devotion, but over time a quiet sorrow grew inside me.

One day, I told him,
“Your mother exploits you too much.”
He only smiled.
“It’s just because she relies on me.”
I replied,
“No, it’s because you’re too kind, too easy to command.”
One day, simply because I mentioned his mother, he suddenly lost his temper and shouted,
“Let’s divorce. Anyone refusing divorce is a coward.”
I was speechless. I had never seen him like that, never imagined he would truly ask for divorce. Yet a few days later, he returned with a big box of my favorite ice cream, smiled, and said,
“I’m that coward. Forgive me.”
Through tears, I laughed.
The years slipped by. His father and elder brother passed away young. His youngest brother was caught in crime. The family depended solely on my husband, who carried everything silently, without complaint. And my mother-in-law, instead of easing his load, leaned on him even more.

When our daughter entered college, I thought at last we would have some time together. But happiness was short-lived: he became ill. Near sixty, he suffered from hypertension, diabetes, high cholesterol… until a stroke damaged several organs. I stayed by his side day and night—bathing, feeding, never letting anyone else touch him. I thought: He cared for me his whole life; now it is my turn to return that devotion.
What broke me most was that, during all those months, his mother never visited. She only appeared when he was already fading. With a faint voice, he whispered,
“Mom… I want your cooking.”
She went home, made four dishes, and had my younger brother-in-law bring them. But he could no longer eat; he only signaled with his eyes for me to eat. I understood—it was his final way of “cooking” for me, through her hands. I ate while sobbing.

Then the day came. The hospital ran out of his blood type. His younger brother offered, but wasn’t a match.
More tests revealed something devastating: my husband wasn’t his parents’ biological son.
I froze in disbelief. His whole life, he had lived serving a mother who never truly loved him. Later, alone, I asked him, and he nodded silently: he had known for years, after overhearing his parents’ conversation. None of his siblings ever knew. His resigned smiles at his mother’s unfairness weren’t from indifference, but from longing—hoping for the affection he never received.
I remembered how he often acted childlike with me, seeking comfort. I used to tease him,
“You’re grown now, how can you be so sweet? Am I your mother?”
Now I understood: it was how he replaced the motherly love he had been denied.

He passed on a rainy afternoon. The room was so still I could hear my heart breaking. Our daughter took me to live with her. One evening, as we walked by the lake, she quietly said,
“Dad told me: I cared for your mother all my life, now I can’t anymore. So from today, I’ll care for her instead.”
I hugged her, smiling through tears. His love never ended; it simply transformed.
Since he left, I’ve learned to live more slowly. Each morning, I still roll toward his side of the bed before remembering that emptiness will never be filled. On his anniversaries, I cook his favorite dishes and place them on the altar, as though he had only stepped away for a while and would soon return.
Our daughter keeps her promise: she tends to me at every meal, every night, never leaving me alone. Sometimes, in the early morning stillness, I hear her whisper,
“Dad, I’m taking care of Mom for you, don’t worry.”
I clutch the pillow, crying quietly—not only from grief, but from warmth in my heart.

People sometimes ask if, knowing he wasn’t his mother’s real son, I feel bitterness for him. I only smile. Because he never lived for himself, only to give. He chose silence, to endure, to carry duty, to shield his loved ones.
If another life exists, I still want to find him again. I want him to hold my hand on a windy day, smiling proudly and saying,
“She’s my wife.”
And next time, I will embrace him with all my strength, never letting him slip away again.
Note: This piece is inspired by stories from the everyday lives of our readers and written by a professional writer. Any resemblance to actual names or locations is purely coincidental. All images are for illustration purposes only.