Mother-in-law welcomes husband’s 8-month pregnant mistress to serve, wife bursts out laughing and says something that MAKES EVERYONE pale…
Lana has been married to Mason for nearly three years in San Jose, California. At first, the marriage was peaceful, but since Lana got pregnant, Mason started coming home late, making excuses for being busy with meetings, and sometimes not coming home at night. Lana was suspicious but tried to hold back.

In the seventh month, Lana accidentally saw sweet messages between Mason and Tracy. The most shocking part: “I will take you home soon, my mother loves you very much.” Lana understood that the matter had gone too far.

One rainy afternoon, Lana came home early. Mother-in-law—Mrs. Parker—was busy cleaning the living room; Mason brought in his suitcase, followed by Tracy—who was already seven or eight months pregnant. Mrs. Parker happily said:

— Lana, this is Tracy, Mason’s friend. She is pregnant, so pitiful, no one to take care of her. Mom told her to come stay here temporarily, so she can serve you when you give birth.

Lana stood still, holding her stomach. Mason avoided his wife’s eyes, and Tracy tried to be polite. Mrs. Parker continued:

— You’re going to be tired when you’re about to give birth, and having Tracy here to help is a blessing for the whole family.

Lana suddenly burst out laughing. The laughter echoed through the silent room. Mrs. Parker frowned:

— What are you laughing at?

Lana looked at each person, her voice calm and cold:

— I’m laughing because I didn’t expect that when my belly was carrying my mother’s grandchild, my mother would welcome her husband’s lover—who was also pregnant—to “serve me”. These two children, what should they call each other in the future: brothers, or… in the same situation?

Mrs. Parker’s face changed, Tracy lowered her head, Mason stuttered, unable to speak. Lana continued:

— I don’t need anyone to serve me. From tomorrow, you and your husband can live comfortably with this “new family”. I will move out, and let the family court in Santa Clara decide on my rights and children.

After saying that, Lana went into her room and closed the door. The next morning, she packed her things and called a taxi to her parents’ house in Fremont.

The news spread quickly among her relatives. Everyone was upset and called Mrs. Parker and Mason to blame. Tracy stayed for a few days and then left because she couldn’t stand the pressure. Mason came to apologize and begged Lana to come back. Lana just smiled faintly:

— You and Mom made your choice. As for me, I chose my child.

Three months later, Lana gave birth to a healthy baby boy. She contacted a lawyer, worked properly with the Family Court, and arranged a clear visitation schedule. She was stronger than ever, taking care of her child herself, not relying on anyone. That story is still told that year as a lesson about self-respect and sobriety of women—in America or anywhere else, it’s the same.