MY CHILD IS NOT A PROP
I’ve been a single mother for three years. I raised Lily on my own ever since her father, Leo, walked out on us when she was just two—leaving me for the woman he was apparently already seeing behind my back.
I didn’t beg him to stay. Yes, it hurt. But I chose not to fall apart. I chose to be strong—for Lily.
But as she grew older, the questions started.
“Why doesn’t Daddy visit me?”
“Does Daddy still love me?”
Each question cut me to pieces.
I did everything to give her a good life—working double or triple shifts at the hospital as a nurse. But there was still something missing. Especially during school events, when she was the only one without a father in the crowd, or when there was no one to read her bedtime stories except me.
So one day, I swallowed my pride and called Leo.
“Lily misses you,” I said. “She asks about you every day. Could you visit her, even just once?”
His voice was cold.
“I’m busy, Stacey. I have a new life now. She’s your responsibility.”
He didn’t show up for her birthday. He didn’t see her learn to ride a bike. He wasn’t there when she lost her first tooth.
It was as if he had erased his own daughter.
Then one Friday, he called.
“Stacey,” he said, “I’ve been thinking about this for a long time. I’m ashamed of myself. I want to make it right. I want to be with Lily.”
I could hardly breathe. After three years of silence, now he wanted a do-over?
“Can I take her this weekend? Just the two of us. I want her to know her father loves her. I want to make up for what I missed.”
I had doubts… but I thought of Lily.
She hadn’t been asking about him lately. And somehow, that silence hurt even more than the questions. It was like she was giving up.
So I agreed.
“But Leo,” I warned him, “if you hurt her again—”
“I won’t,” he cut in. “This is for her. Not us.”
That Saturday, he sent pictures—Lily smiling on a carousel, waving at a puppet show. She looked happy. And for a moment, I believed Leo was sincere.
But Sunday came. They were late coming home.
While tidying up, my sister called.
“Stacey, how could you let this happen?” she asked.
“What are you talking about?” I replied, confused.
“I saw something on Instagram… You haven’t seen it?”
My heart dropped. She sent me the screenshot.
And there, in a wedding photo, stood Leo—in a tuxedo, holding hands with her—Rachel, the woman who broke our family apart. And between them… Lily, in a white flower girl dress, holding a tiny bouquet, her face lost and confused.
They used my daughter… as a flower girl in their wedding.
Without even telling me.
I was furious. I called Leo—no answer. I texted—ignored.
But I recognized the venue in the photo. A local estate I had passed before.
I drove there immediately.
At the far end of the reception, I saw them. Rachel posing endlessly for photos. Leo sipping champagne. And Lily… sitting alone on a bench, clutching her teddy bear, like she wanted to disappear.
“Mommy… can we go home now?” she whispered.
I hugged her tight. “Yes, baby. We’re going home. Right now.”
As we walked away, Rachel rushed toward us.
“Wait! We haven’t taken our family photo yet!”
Family? My blood boiled.
“You used my child for your Instagram wedding,” I snapped.
“She’s not a prop. She’s a child. And she had no idea what you were doing to her.”
“But she’s so cute,” Rachel said with a laugh. “We don’t have our own kid yet, so—”
Before I could explode, one of her bridesmaids stepped forward.
“She planned this,” the woman said.
“She told us, ‘I need a kid for the photos. Leo will lend me his daughter. Her mom’s easy to deal with.’”
Silence fell.
All eyes turned to Rachel.
One of Leo’s relatives came over to me. “I’m sorry, Stacey. We didn’t know.”
I didn’t need to hear anything else.
I carried Lily in my arms and left without another word.
By Monday, nearly all of Rachel’s relatives had unfollowed her.
The wedding photos were gone.
Maybe they finally realized what kind of “fairy tale” she staged—built on my child.
What mattered most was getting Lily home safe.
And Leo?
He won’t get near our daughter again…
Not until he learns how to be a real father.