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My Husband Sent Me a Cake at Work That Said “I’m Divorcing You”—What He Learned Next Broke Him

I was staring at the blinking cursor on my computer screen, my thoughts drifting far from the spreadsheet I was supposed to finish, when a knock broke the quiet rhythm of the office. Before I could answer, the door swung open and the delivery guy leaned in, holding a bright pink bakery box tied with a white ribbon.

“Good afternoon, Emma! This is for you!” he said cheerfully, drawing the attention of half the room.

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A few coworkers glanced over, smiling knowingly. Someone whispered, “Lucky you,” probably assuming Jake had surprised me with something sweet just because.

I forced a smile and took the box, my stomach tightening for reasons I couldn’t explain. Jake never sent cakes to my office. Not because he didn’t care—he just wasn’t that kind of man. Practical. Reserved. Not spontaneous.

“Thanks,” I said quietly, placing the box on my desk.

I waited until the delivery guy left and the office noise settled back into its usual hum before lifting the lid.

The smell of vanilla frosting hit me first. Then I saw the writing.

Neatly piped in dark chocolate letters across the pink icing were four words that made my vision blur:

“I am divorcing you.”

 

For a second, my brain refused to process what my eyes were seeing. I laughed once, short and breathless, convinced this had to be some kind of sick mistake.

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Then I noticed what lay beside the cake.

A small white stick. Plastic. Familiar.

A positive pregnancy test.

The world tilted.

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My fingers went numb as I gripped the edge of the desk. Sounds faded, replaced by a roaring in my ears. Jake had found it. The test I’d hidden in the back of the bathroom cabinet, behind towels and cleaning supplies, hoping—foolishly—that I’d have time to explain everything properly.

I hadn’t even told him yet. Not because I didn’t want to, but because I was terrified.

Terrified of hope.

Terrified of disappointment.

Terrified of reopening wounds we’d spent years trying to stitch together.

Jake and I had been married for seven years. Seven years of love, laughter, and quiet companionship—and seven years of negative tests, doctor visits, polite sympathy, and whispered apologies in the dark.

When the doctors told Jake he was infertile, something in him broke. He never said it outright, but I saw it in the way his shoulders slumped, in how he avoided conversations about children, in how he apologized for things that were never his fault.

“I’m sorry,” he’d say, over and over. “I know you wanted to be a mom.”

But I hadn’t given up. Not on him. Not on us. And not on the possibility—however small—that the doctors could be wrong.

I didn’t even remember leaving the office. I only knew that the next moment, I was gripping the steering wheel, my knuckles white, tears blurring the road as I drove home.

Jake’s car was already in the driveway.

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