Natalie could hear them clearly through the crack between the door and the wall.
She leaned against the wall and eavesdropped carefully.
"So, now you suspect that the child in her belly might not be yours?" Moriah said.
Billy nodded.
"What are you going to do?"
"When she is four months pregnant, I can take the amniotic fluid for a paternity test. We will know the result by then." Billy said.
Moriah also thought that it was a good idea. She nodded and agreed.
Billy stood up, casually took the suit on the hanger, and put it on. He said, "I'm going out for a while."
"Where are you going? It's already so late."
"I'm going for a drink with Mark. He has already arrived there. I'll be back soon. Mom, good night." While saying that, Billy walked towards the outside of the study.
Natalie returned to her room carefully and quickly. Her heart was still beating wildly.
Billy wanted to do a paternity test. What if he found that he wasn't the biological father of the child in Natalie's belly when she was four months pregnant?
Natalie felt a terrible headache. She was about to go crazy. She had no way out and no hope now.
She turned on the computer, surfed the Internet, and started looking up information.
An online article wrote, "Paternity test can only be done after eight weeks of pregnancy at the earliest. And you need to do the test with the fetal villi."
Natalie thought, 'I should know the child's biological father before Billy and Moriah so that it will be to my advantage.'
The online article remarked, "It is harmful to the fetus to do the paternity test with the fetal villi." However, she had no choice.
Only if she knew the child's biological father could she figure out how to deal with it, which would also be to her advantage.
Although Mark was at the bar, he didn't drink. He just watched Billy and Charlie drink.
His wife and children didn't like the smell of alcohol, s o he didn't drink.
Charlie thought it was strange. 'Mark never went out o f his home before. Why is he so abnormal today?'
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: A Contract Marriage After a ONS