I Was 8 Months Pregnant, Married For 5 Months When I Discovered My Husband Was Married

I met Tony at a time in my life when I was not even looking for love. I was twenty-seven, young, focused on building myself, and very sure I didn’t …

I Was 8 Months Pregnant, Married For 5 Months When I Discovered My Husband Was Married

I met Tony at a time in my life when I was not even looking for love. I was twenty-seven, young, focused on building myself, and very sure I didn’t want anything to do with an older man. But Tony was persistent, alarmingly persistent. Every day after our mutual friend gave him my number, he called. Morning, afternoon, evening. Sometimes he would text, “Please, just one date,” as if his entire future depended on it.

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He was forty. I kept telling myself, “Frema, this man is too old for you,” but something about the way he spoke—calm, mature, gentle—made me soften. So when I finally said yes to one date, I wasn’t expecting anything magical. But that day changed everything. He was funny, attentive, charming. He carried my bag without asking. He spoke as though he had lived many lives and learned from all of them. I went home thinking, “Maybe age is just a number after all.”

Before I agreed to date him officially, I asked the friend who introduced us, “Are you sure Tony is a good guy?” She answered, “I haven’t known him for that long. So you have to decide for yourself.”

Maybe I should have taken that as a warning, but I was in love now, or so I believed. It was when we started dating that Tony told me he had lived in the UK for ten years and finally returned home to settle. I admired him for that. When I asked why he came back, he responded with a patriotic grin, “Home sweet home. Ghana is where my soul rests.” Right there, I knew I had found a good man, someone who had traveled, seen the world, and still chose family and simplicity.

Five months later, I got pregnant. I was terrified. Not because I didn’t love him, but because I was raised in a home where you don’t give birth before marriage. I thought Tony would panic. But when I told him, he said, “Keep it. In my family, we don’t abort.” I told him, “In my family, we don’t give birth outside marriage.” So we agreed to have a traditional wedding and later sign in court. The pregnancy was less than three months when we rushed through a traditional marriage. When it got to the court signing, Tony kept postponing it. “Work is stressing me,” he would say. “Let me sort out a few things.” I agreed. After all, men think differently. I didn’t want to appear nagging.

Then one day, everything shattered. I found out by accident that Tony had a wife and a child in the UK. I felt my heart stop. My vision blurred. I was eight months pregnant and five months married. I couldn’t breathe. I asked him calmly, too calmly for the storm inside me, “Why didn’t you tell me?” He answered, “We broke up three years ago. I didn’t mention it because the marriage didn’t exist when I met you.”

I screamed until I thought the baby would fall out. “Show me the divorce papers!” I yelled. And Tony, without shame, replied, “It’s in court. By the end of the year everything will be finished.”

That was three years ago.

The divorce “is still in court.” His wife still wears her ring. She still uses his surname on social media. She still speaks to him freely and comfortably. When I contacted her on the phone to know the truth from her own mouth, she told me that she knew about our marriage before I walked into it. She said, “We are divorcing but not divorced yet. Don’t worry, dear.”

That was also three years ago, but today, her TikTok account boldly shows Tony’s surname, and my husband—or I should say our husband—talks to her like nothing is wrong.

When I complain, he says, “We share a child. I send child support. That’s why we talk a lot.”
When I ask why she’s still using his surname, he says, “It takes time to change documents in the UK.”
When I ask why she still wears her ring, he says, “I can’t explain that. She’s the only one who can explain.”

Every answer makes me feel like a fool.

We sleep in separate rooms now. For over a month, I’ve refused his touch, but he’s calm, relaxed, unbothered, as if the entire marriage is on pause until I “get over it.” Meanwhile, I’m burning inside. Angry every day. Bitter every morning. Crying quietly at night. I feel like the second wife, the placeholder, the woman who married a man who belongs to someone else.

Just a few days ago he said, “I want us to have a second child, but you’re keeping yourself away from me.” I told him, “Not until I see divorce evidence. No ring on her finger, no surname on her page, no court excuses. Until then, nothing.” He didn’t argue. He simply shrugged. The same shrug that breaks me more than any insult ever could.

Sometimes I stare at him asleep and wonder, “Does he still love her? Does he wish he never left? Am I living with a man whose heart is still in the UK?” I keep asking myself what more I am supposed to do. I’ve confronted him, prayed about it, begged him, fought him, reasoned with him, even involved family members. Nothing changes. He lives in comfort, while I live in emotional chaos.

I want my marriage to work, God knows I do. I didn’t come into a married man’s life willingly. I entered believing I was the only woman. I entered with trust, innocence, and hope. And now I’m stuck between staying with a man whose past is still active, and leaving a marriage I built with pain and sacrifice.

I ask myself every day: How do I get my husband? How do I become the only woman? How do I stop this ghost marriage from overshadowing my own? The truth is, I don’t know. But I know I’m tired of being the wife who is fighting a woman who never left.

—Frema

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