I went to Japan when my son was just three. Back then my in-laws were struggling, and both our parents said, “If you go for a few years and send money home, you can build a house, pay for the child’s schooling, and the family will be better off.” I swallowed my tears, signed the contract, and told myself: five years only, I can bear the hardship.
During those years abroad I worked twelve hours a day in a factory, night shifts stacked on top of day shifts, sometimes only getting a fifteen-minute break. But whenever I thought of my chubby son’s face and the message my husband sent — “Don’t worry, I’ll take care of the child” — I kept going. Every month I reliably sent back more than twenty million, putting it all into a joint account to build the house and pay for our child’s tuition. I skipped buying new clothes and nice meals, dreaming only of the day we would be reunited.
When my contract expired, I nervously called home. My husband said, “Just come home as a surprise—our child will be so happy.” Hearing that, my heart raced. On the flight I pictured my son running out to hug me, crying, “Mom! You’re home!”
But life is not like the movies.
That evening I stood with my suitcase at the gate. The two-story house I’d paid for with the sweat of working overseas was brightly lit. Before I could ring the bell, the door opened. A strange woman stepped onto the porch carrying a tray of food, wearing a floral nightgown and her hair tied up. Inside, my husband was feeding our son.
Our son looked up, eyes wide, stammering, “Mom…mom?” But then he turned to look at the woman, hesitating. I froze.
“Explain yourself!” I screamed, my hands trembling.
My husband jumped up, pale: “You…why didn’t you tell me you were coming back?”
“Was I supposed to warn you so you could hide it better?” I said bitterly.
The woman fumbled: “Sister… I’m sorry. He and I have been living together for nearly three years. I didn’t know you would come back.”
I looked at my son; my heart ached. He was clinging to his father’s side, eyes confused. Clearly, he had gotten used to calling someone else “mom.” For five years I toiled in a foreign land, sending every đồng back home, while at home he lived comfortably with another woman.
I couldn’t cry — my throat was tight. “What did you promise me? What did you swear before our ancestors’ altar? For five years I worked my back off to send money home — and what about you?”
He lowered his head and muttered, “I’m sorry. I was lonely… the woman… the family needed warmth. She came, cared for my child and me. It became a habit.”
I laughed, a sound that tore the air: “A habit? You got used to betraying me? What about me? I was lonely, sick, crying in a cold factory too, but I didn’t betray you!”
The woman began to cry and dropped to her knees: “Sister, I know I’m wrong. But please think of the child. He already sees me as his mother. If you take him away, he’ll be shocked…”
I looked at my son. He clung to his father’s leg, eyes fearful. I felt like an outsider in the very home I had built.
I took a deep breath and forced my voice steady: “You must choose. Either me — your lawful wife who sacrificed five years of her youth for this family — or her, the woman who came later but whom you fed with my money and your love. You must choose today.”
Silence fell. My husband trembled, his eyes red. My son sobbed softly. The woman bowed her head, clutching her dress.
Finally he said, “I… choose her.”
I staggered. Those words stabbed straight into my chest. I almost collapsed, but I immediately stood up and wiped my tears. “Fine. Then I choose freedom. I won’t fight for this house or the money. I will only fight for my son, by law. I will prove every đồng I sent. You betrayed me; you’re not worthy.”
The woman tried to speak, but I cut her off: “Don’t beg. You came into this; prepare to live with the consequences.”
I grabbed my suitcase and turned away into the steady drizzle. My son ran after me a little way and called weakly, “Mom…” That cry both tore me and gave me strength.
That night I rented a small room and cried until I had nothing left. But the next morning I filed a lawsuit. I was no longer the weak woman who waited. I knew what I needed: my son and a life not built on a traitor.
A year later I won custody of my child. I opened a small eatery with the remaining savings. Every afternoon my son sits at the table doing his homework and looks up to ask, “Mom, did you sell a lot today?”
I smile, my heart lighter. My ex-husband visits occasionally, but I don’t tremble anymore. I have learned that losing some things teaches you to be strong. I lost a marriage but kept my motherhood. And this time, I know for certain: no one can take him from my hands again.
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