“Vadim, sweetheart, what just happened? Please explain.” Elena stood in the bedroom, stunned, staring at the man she loved. It was their wedding night—something she had waited for with devotion and purity. Yet the moment she removed her wedding dress, Vadim pulled away and left her.
Without a word, Vadim bolted out of the house. His parents emerged, confused, calling after him, but he kept running. He had no answers—just pain. He ended up by the river, face buried in his hands, overwhelmed by what he had just discovered.
“This can’t be random,” he thought. The birthmark. It changed everything.
Back at home, Elena, distraught, threw her crumpled wedding dress back on and fled. Irina, Vadim’s mother, called after her, but Elena didn’t stop. She flagged down a car and headed to her childhood home, silent, devastated.
At her mother’s apartment, she collapsed in tears. Nadezhda, her mother, was terrified. “What happened, my girl? Did he hurt you?” she asked, panicking.
Elena, heartbroken, cried out: “I followed every rule you gave me—no dating, no relationship before marriage—and look what it got me. He humiliated me on our wedding night! Why, Mom? Why?”
Nadezhda had always admired Vadim and believed in the marriage. But a hidden worry from long ago crept back. Now, she had to face it. She needed to speak to Alexey—Vadim’s father.
The next day, she called him. “We need to meet,” she insisted. Surprised but cooperative, Alexey agreed, choosing a discreet restaurant away from his wife’s ears.
Once seated, Nadezhda got to the point: “You need to take a DNA test. I think Elena is your daughter. That’s why Vadim ran.”
Alexey was stunned. Their past affair had been discreet. He remembered it—but a child? That never crossed his mind. Nadezhda had been married back then. But now, the signs were clear.
Sergey, her husband, had always been emotionally distant, more invested in work than family. Their marriage lacked passion, but Nadezhda never questioned Elena’s paternity—until now.
“I need to speak with Vadim,” Alexey said, heavy with regret. “If what you’re saying is true, I’ll take the test.”
Back home, Alexey approached his son. Vadim had calmed down, ready to talk.
“She has a birthmark,” he began. “A star-shaped one—just like Grandma Laura’s. You remember how self-conscious she was about it? You said you were relieved you didn’t inherit it. Dad, that mark… it’s not random. She’s your daughter, isn’t she?”
Alexey’s heart sank. Vadim had figured it out. He apologized, his voice cracking. “I should never have allowed this to happen. I knew about Nadezhda. I just never thought… I’m so sorry.”
Vadim had loved Elena deeply. He had proposed quickly, wanting to build a life with her. They had honored tradition—no intimacy until marriage. But if they hadn’t waited, they might have discovered the truth earlier.
Now, they were married—and siblings. Divorce was inevitable. And the future? Unimaginable.
When the DNA results confirmed the truth, Alexey called Nadezhda. “It’s true,” he said. “They’re siblings. They can’t stay married.”
Nadezhda, torn with guilt, finally told Elena the truth. The confession shattered her.
“You always told me to be honest, loyal. You made me believe in all of it. And now I find out you cheated on Dad? That I married my brother?” Elena was furious and heartbroken. Her image of her mother collapsed.
Sergey, on the other hand, reacted calmly. Perhaps he had always sensed the emotional distance. Unlike Elena, he didn’t rage—he just listened, quietly processing the truth.
Elena, however, withdrew. The betrayal from both her mother and fate was too much. Forgiveness, if ever possible, would take time.