The doctor lowered her gaze, respecting my pain.
I continued.
—He didn’t force you to leave with Paola that same night. He didn’t force you to post photos saying that life had taken away a lie from you. He didn’t force you to send me papers to take my house and charge me for years of marriage as if I had been a bad investment.
Paola looked at him.
—Charge him/her expenses?
Diego closed his eyes.
—It was a legal strategy.
I laughed.
—What a lovely name cowards give to cruelty.
I grabbed my bag.
The doctor handed me the printed ultrasound images. I clutched them to my chest like armor.
“I’ll continue my prenatal care with you, doctor,” I said. “But don’t give him any information if I’m not there.”
Diego raised his head.
—I am the father.
I looked at him.
There it was.
Late.
But there.
Suddenly he wanted the word.
—An hour ago you came to hear how many weeks pregnant “someone else’s child” was. Fatherhood doesn’t just happen when the outcome suits you.
I left the doctor’s office without waiting for an answer.
My legs were trembling in the hallway. I walked to the elevator with my back straight, even though inside I was breaking.
Diego followed me.
Paola too.
—Laura, wait.
I didn’t wait.
He reached in to stop the elevator door.
-Please.
That word sounded strange coming from her.
I never used it when I thought I was right.
“I’m going to get tested,” he said. “DNA, semen, whatever you want. We’re going to fix this.”
I looked at him from inside the elevator.
—Don’t confuse fixing with returning.
The door closed.
And finally, without him in front of me, I bent down.
I cried with the ultrasound images pressed to my chest, while a strange lady in the elevator asked me if I was okay.
It wasn’t right.
But my babies did.
And that day that was enough.
I got home and locked the door.
Then I pushed the chair back against the door, out of habit, though I no longer knew if it was fear or courage. I left the pictures on the table and stared at them for hours.
Two little spots.
Two heartbeats.
Two lives.
My mother arrived in the afternoon. I had sent her a message with a photo of the ultrasound and a single sentence:
“There are two.”
She came in crying.
He hugged me without asking anything.
—Oh, my child.
I broke down in his arms.
I told him everything.
Vasectomy without supervision.
The twelve weeks.
The second baby.
Diego’s face.
Paola’s face.
My mom listened with the calm of women who have seen too many injustices involving men’s shoes.
When I finished, she put water on for tea.
—Now you’re going to do three things—he said.
-Which is it?
—Eat, sleep, and call a lawyer.
-Mother…
—Don’t give me that look. That man already showed you what he’ll do when he feels cornered. You’re not alone, but you’re not going to walk barefoot on broken glass either.
The next day, Diego started calling.
First ten times.
Then twenty.
After messages.
“Forgive me.”
“I made a mistake.”
“Paola means nothing.”
“I was confused.”
“They are my children.”
My children.
The phrase made me nauseous.
The same babies who the week before were proof of my infidelity were now his because a device in a doctor’s office had restored his pride.
I didn’t answer.
At noon, his mother arrived.
She didn’t have black bags with her this time.
She was bringing flowers.
White roses, like those found in hospitals or at funerals.
I opened the door with the chain on.
“Laura,” she said, in a sweet voice. “My son told me everything. It was a terrible misunderstanding.”
Misunderstanding.
I felt the babies moving, although it was still too early.
Perhaps it wasn’t them.
Perhaps it was my anger.
—You called me a disgrace.
He lowered his gaze.
—I was hurt by Diego.
—I was pregnant.
—We didn’t know.
—They didn’t want to know.
She pressed the flowers to her chest.
—They are my grandchildren.
I stared at her for a long time.
—A few days ago they were a stain on my belly.
He paled.
—Don’t be cruel.
—I’m learning from you.
I closed the door.
I heard her crying outside for a while.
I didn’t open it.
That night I hired the lawyer my mother had recommended. Her name was Irene Robles, a woman in her fifties with a sharp gaze and red fingernails. When she heard my story, she didn’t show any surprise. She just took notes.
Did he sign anything about the vasectomy?
—I have messages. She told me she would get it done because she didn’t want any more children “for now,” but that we would see later.
—Did he go to the follow-up appointment?
-No.
—Do you have proof of the relationship with Paola?
I showed her the photos, posts, old messages where she called me “Lauri” and then the photo of the restaurant.
Irene raised an eyebrow.
—What a polite mistress.
-Lot.
—Okay. We’re going to respond to her divorce petition. And we’re going to request measures to protect her financially during her pregnancy. We’re also going to document the defamation, the abandonment, and the pressure she exerted to sign an abusive agreement.
—And the babies?
—Babies are not bargaining chips. If he wants to acknowledge them, he should do it the right way. If he wants proof, it will be done when appropriate, and not to humiliate her.
I breathed.
For the first time since the two lines, I felt like someone was holding a lamp in the middle of the dark room.
Diego appeared at the door three days later.
He didn’t scream.
He didn’t hit.
He had several days’ growth of beard and dark circles under his eyes.
—I need to see you.
—Talk to my lawyer.
—Laura, please. It’s me.
I looked at him through the peephole.
—That was the problem. That it really was you.
He remained silent.
“I broke up with Paola,” he said.
I almost laughed.
-Congratulations.
—Don’t be like that.
I barely opened the door, with the chain.
I wanted to see his face when he understood.
—So what? Hurt? Lucid? Pregnant with your children and still not wanting to comfort you?
Her eyes filled with tears.
—I thought you had deceived me.
—And you decided to punish me before even confirming. That wasn’t pain, Diego. It was permission. You were waiting for an excuse to leave with her without feeling guilty.
Her face twisted.
Because the truth doesn’t always need medical tests.
Sometimes it just needs to be said out loud.
—Paola looked for me when I was confused—he murmured.
—Paola didn’t pack your suitcase. Paola didn’t force you to post that photo. Paola didn’t make you bring me an agreement to take my house.
He lowered his head.
—My lawyer handled the house situation.
—The lawyer doesn’t sleep in your body.
Silence.
I placed a hand on my belly.
—You’re not coming in, Diego.
-Never?
That word brought fear.
And for the first time, I didn’t feel like fixing it.
—I don’t know. But not today. And not because you’re feeling sorry for yourself right when you lost control of the story.
I closed it.
The following months were filled with war and waiting.
The twin pregnancy forced me to slow down. Severe nausea, fatigue, constant appointments, vitamins, ultrasounds. My body became both a battlefield and a temple.
Diego tried to accompany me to the appointments.
At first I didn’t stop.
Then, on the advice of the psychologist and the lawyer, I allowed her to attend some sessions, always with clear conditions. No scenes. No touching me. No speaking for me.
The first time she heard both complete heartbeats, she cried.
She cried a lot.
I looked at the screen, not at him.
I didn’t want her tears to confuse me.
Later, in the parking lot, he said:
—I missed the first heartbeat because I’m an idiot.
—You missed out because you were cruel.
He nodded.
-Yeah.
That was the first time he didn’t defend himself.
It wasn’t enough.
But I wrote it down somewhere in my heart, without promising her anything.
Paola didn’t disappear so easily.
He sent me a message from an unknown number:
“I just want you to know that Diego told me you guys were already in bad shape before I came along.”
I replied:
“And you believed him because it suited you.”
He wrote to me more.
I didn’t answer.
A month later I learned that she was trying to sue him for money he had lent her for an apartment. Diego had lied to her too. He promised her that as soon as I “confessed” to the infidelity, he would keep the house and they would start over.
How beautiful.
I was the villain in his story and the mortgage guarantee in hers.
Irene laughed when she found out.
—Men who lie a lot often recycle scripts.
The neighborhood, on the other hand, took longer to fall silent.
The neighbor who used to greet me with pity started to see me differently when my mother-in-law, desperate to regain access, told everyone that the babies were indeed Diego’s. Then I went from being seen as unfaithful to “poor thing.”
I didn’t like it either.
I didn’t want pity.
I wanted respect.
One day, in the store, a lady said:
—Oh, Laura, it’s so good that everything is cleared up.
I looked at her with a bag of rice in my hand.
—Not everything was clarified. It was only proven that I wasn’t lying. What he did remains just as shrouded in mystery.
The lady didn’t know what to say.
Better.
Sometimes other people’s silence can also be learned.
At twenty-eight weeks, one of the babies started to worry the doctor because of his growth. I was put on almost complete bed rest. My mom moved in with me. Diego asked for permission to help.
I said yes, but from the outside.
Shopping.
Medicines.
Payments.
Transfers.
No bed.
No house.
No marriage.
One day she arrived with diapers and a bag of sweet bread. My mom opened it.
“Leave them there,” he told her.
—Can I see her?
—She can see him whenever she wants to see him.
—I am her husband.
My mom let out a dry laugh.
—Son, you unsubscribed yourself.
I listened from the room and smiled for the first time in days.
The babies were born at thirty-six weeks.
A boy and a girl.
Nicholas and Emilia.
Small, wrinkled, furious.
Alive.
When they placed them close to me, I felt all the noise of the world fade away. The accusations. The vasectomy. Paola. The agreement. The stares. It all faded into the distance.
It was just them.
My two tired miracles.
Diego was in the waiting room. I allowed him to come in later, after I had already held them, kissed them, and called their names.
He entered slowly.
As if the room were a church.
Upon seeing them, he covered his mouth.
—Laura…
—Don’t speak loudly.
He nodded.
He approached the crib.
Nicholas barely opened his eyes.
Emilia moved her mouth as if searching for milk.
Diego cried again.
—They are perfect.
I looked at him.
—Yes. And you’ll never use its existence to erase what you did.
He shook his head.
-No.
—Not even to pressure me.
-No.
—Not even to say that we’re family like before.
That hurt him.
—So what are we?
I looked at my children.
I thought of the woman who saw two lines and ran happily to show proof.
I thought about the one who was called unfaithful.
In which she vomited while reading a cruel publication.
In which she heard two heartbeats and decided never to kneel again.
“We’re the parents of Nicolás and Emilia,” I said. “That’s a lot. But it’s not marriage.”
Diego closed his eyes.
He accepted.
I don’t know if it was for real or because I had no choice.
Months later, the DNA test was done.
Not because I needed to prove anything.
Because legally it was convenient to shut the world up, and him.
Result: compatible paternity with Diego in both babies.
The sheet arrived by mail.
I read it once and kept it.
I didn’t cry.
I had already cried enough for a truth that was always mine.
The divorce followed.
Slower, more serious, fairer.
The house was secured for me and the children. The pension was established. Diego agreed to mandatory therapy if he wanted extended cohabitation. His mother had to apologize before meeting the babies.
Not a nice apology in front of everyone.
A real one, in my living room, looking me in the face.
“I was cruel to you,” he said.
I was holding Emilia.
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