When my husband died in 2016, I found out he had been secretly seeing his son (aged 40) from his first marriage, for the past four years.
I went through agonies waiting for my husband's will to be sent. I wondered if he had changed it due to this secret contact.
I only found out they were in contact because I found texts on his phone a few days before the funeral. I couldn't face phoning him and asked my BIL to. He did attend the funeral in May, as well as the ashes ceremony in August.
When my husband divorced his wife due to her adultery and subsequent serious affair with a property millionaire in 1981 his son was 7. I met my husband the following year, and he hadn't seen him so I encouraged him to make contact again. He wrote a letter asking for contact, and was told not to make contact as his son was 'settled in his new life' and contact would only upset him.
Thirteen years later my MIL rang to say he had visited her, and he would be phoning my husband.
We made our 'mirror wills' in 1995.
In January 1996 he phoned my husband, and they met for the first time in 13 years for his 21st birthday. Sadly his son said contact would be too difficult as his loyalties lay with his mother. My husband was devastated. Our second child, my daughter, was due any day.
At the funeral, meeting him for the first time, I felt very sorry he had spent his life wondering why he couldn't see his Dad but hoped during the four years he'd secretly been seeing my husband, he'd been able to get to know him.
At our house, after the funeral, he told me he was glad to find out my husband wasn't the 'b+stard' his mother had described. I was horrified he thought it acceptable to say this to me.
A few days after the funeral, he emailed asking to see 'his Dad's will'.
Again I felt very upset. I asked my solicitor to send him a copy and emailed him to say I was curious as to why he had asked.
He said he wanted to know if his father had thought of him. I had left my husband alone with the solicitor to discuss it, and he had decided to leave everything to our children. If they and their children had passed, the money would go to his son.
I remade my will immediately, and have not made any provision for him. I am concerned he could contest it, but my solicitor says it's bombproof. I was so disgusted he made those comments about my husband, hours after the funeral.
He had also only contacted my daughter, not my son. I hope when I've gone he doesn't harrass her.
Seeing this post I think I will also leave a letter explaining my actions.