The soft whoosh of the curtains dancing in the morning breeze filled the room as the Saturday sun filtered in. I leaned down and kissed Carlos on the cheek.
"I'll be back soon," I said, forcing a smile. "Just need to grab a few things before tonight's fundraiser."
Carlos didn’t look up from his phone. “Don’t be long. I need you to write my speech.”
As I turned toward the door, I stopped short. Daniela and Mateo were in the hallway, standing like guards.
"Going somewhere?" Daniela asked sweetly, though her eyes held no kindness.
"I'm meeting Sofia and the architect for the hospital project," I replied, trying to move past.
Daniela stepped in front of me, silk robe swishing. "Always running. No wonder Carlos thinks you’re... not enough."
I froze. "What did you say?"
Mateo, standing beside her, chimed in, voice sharp. "That's why Daddy spends more time with us. You're not fun."
"Mateo, stop," Daniela said, without really meaning it. Her lips curled into a smile. "But he’s not wrong."
My hands shook. "Carlos is not your father. Stop filling his head with lies."
"Lies?" Daniela laughed softly, a cruel sound. "The only lie is your marriage. Five years, and still no children. Not even that baby you lost."
Her words hit me like a slap. I felt my breath catch. My voice broke. "How dare you..."
Footsteps echoed on the stairs. Carlos appeared, face hard to read.
"Emily's upset again," Daniela said with a dramatic sigh. "So emotional. Over nothing."
I turned to Carlos, voice trembling. "She's bringing up the baby. The one we lost. That’s cruel, Carlos. Say something."
Carlos slowly came down the stairs. “You need to stop clinging to the past. It’s not healthy.”
"Not healthy?" My heart pounded. "She’s using our pain to hurt me!"
Daniela gave a fake gasp. "I only said it was sad... that you never had a child."
Mateo tugged Carlos's sleeve. "She called me a liar, too."
"I didn’t!" I said quickly.
"Enough," Carlos snapped. "Every morning, it’s the same with you. Daniela and Mateo are family. When will you accept that?"
"Family?" I laughed bitterly. "Is that what we’re calling it now?"
Carlos stepped closer, gripping my arm. “What exactly are you implying?”
I pulled away. “Let me go. I know what’s going on between you two.”
Carlos’s eyes narrowed. “This paranoia of yours... maybe you should talk to Dr. Mendez again. Clearly, the anxiety meds aren't working.”
"I don’t need pills! I need a husband who defends me!”
Daniela slid up behind him, placing a gentle hand on his shoulder. “She’s getting hysterical again. Maybe I should take Mateo upstairs.”
Carlos turned. “No, we’re leaving. I promised to take Mateo to the baseball field. You” he pointed at me“ clear your head. And when we come back, I expect you to apologize to him.”
"Apologize? For what?!"
“For creating a toxic environment,” he said coldly. “For making a child feel unwelcome in his home.”
“This is MY home too!” I shouted. “I have rights here!”
Daniela let out a mocking laugh. “Please. Everything is in Carlos’s name. The house. The cars. Even your precious foundation? Funded by him.”
I turned to Carlos, hoping, begging, for him to speak up. He said nothing.
Daniela smirked. “Without Carlos, you’re nothing.”
"That's enough, Daniela," Carlos muttered, but his voice was soft, empty.
I grabbed my Mercedes G-Class G 63 AMG keys from the table. Clink. My fingers trembled.
“I’m leaving.”
Behind me, Carlos called, “Be back by three. You need to get ready.”
I didn’t answer. I slammed the door shut. BANG.
As I walked to my car, blinking away tears, I saw it, through the front window. Carlos and Daniela, close together. Whispering. Laughing.
Café Mariana buzzed with soft clinks of cups and chatter. I spotted Sofia right away—her red Louis Vuitton scarf bright in the crowd. Next to her sat a man I recognized from photos: Alejandro Vega.
He stood when he saw me, tall and calm, with tousled dark hair and kind eyes.
“Emily!” Sofia stood and hugged me. She whispered, “You look terrible. What happened?”
I tried to smile. “Morning chaos. I'll explain later.”
She held my arms. “Emily, this is Alejandro Vega, the architect I told you about.”
Alejandro offered his hand. “Mrs. Reyes, it’s an honor. Your work with the foundation is inspiring.”
His voice was deep, with a soft accent. When I shook his hand, a strange warmth shot up my arm. Our eyes met, and I forgot to breathe for a moment.
“The pleasure’s mine, Mr. Vega,” I said.
“Please, Alejandro.”
Sofia cleared her throat. “Coffee’s coming. Shall we go over the presentation?”
For the next hour, Alejandro showed us designs for the children’s hospital. His passion was clear in every word. When he spoke about making spaces that helped kids heal, his whole face lit up.
“My wife,” he said softly, “passed away from cancer three years ago. She was a pediatric oncologist. These designs… they’re her dream.”
“I’m so sorry,” I said, touched by his honesty.
He looked at me. “Thank you. I’m hoping to build something that keeps her spirit alive.”
The way he said it, it made my chest ache. He was open with his pain. Loving. Honest.
So different from Carlos.
Sofia glanced at me. “Emily, Alejandro has some concerns about the budget. Maybe you can explain?”
I nodded. “Of course.”
Alejandro pulled out papers. “There are some gaps in the numbers. What your team gave me doesn’t match what was announced publicly. It’s like money’s missing.”
My stomach dropped.
“I’ve noticed that too,” Sofia added. “I tried to tell you before”
“Not here,” I said quickly, looking around. “Let’s talk later. At the fundraiser.”
Alejandro nodded. “Of course. I didn’t mean to worry you.”
“No. I’m glad you brought it up,” I said. “I just...”
My phone buzzed. A message from Carlos:
Where are you?
Sofia raised an eyebrow. “He’s checking up on you again?”
“I should go,” I muttered, standing.
Alejandro stood with me. “If I crossed a line, Emily”
“You didn’t,” I said. “And please, just call me Emily.”
He smiled. Gentle. Warm. And something in me softened. "Emily, then. Until tonight."
As I stepped outside, the cold air stung my cheeks, but it wasn’t the wind that made me shiver.
The court papers came at 6 AM, barely twelve hours after Solana was born. A man in a wrinkled suit pushed the papers at Maria Rodriguez, who was standing guard outside my hospital room."Emergency Request for Guardianship," Sofia read out loud, her voice tight with anger. "Javier Reyes versus Emily Vega, formerly Reyes, about the minor child Solana Vega."The morning light coming through the hospital windows felt cold and grey, like the world had lost its warmth overnight."How can he ask for guardianship?" Alejandro demanded. "He's not even her father!""He's saying he has rights because Carlos was his brother," Sofia explained, turning through the pages. "He says as the child's uncle, he has more legal rights than you do since you're not her biological father."I held Solana closer to my chest, feeling her tiny heartbeat against mine. She was sleeping peacefully, completely unaware that strangers were already fighting over her future."What else does it say?" I asked, though I wasn'
"Move! Move! Move!" Maria's voice cut through all the noise as her guards rushed me toward the big black car. Rain pounded against the windows, and thunder crashed across the dark countryside like the sky was angry."The pains are getting closer together," I gasped, holding Alejandro's hand so tight I thought I might break his fingers. "Only two minutes apart now.""Dr. Vega is meeting us at Saint Mary's Hospital," he said, helping me into the backseat. "It's only fifteen minutes away.""Fifteen minutes in this storm?" I looked out at the sheets of rain that made everything look gray and blurry. "We'll be lucky if we make it in thirty."Mateo climbed in next to me, his face white but brave. "I'm staying with you.""Mateo, maybe you should—""No." His ten-year-old voice was hard as stone. "Families stick together. You taught me that."Another pain hit as we drove away from the safe house. I bent over, breathing through it the way Dr. Vega had shown me. But these weren't the easy practi
"Forty-eight hours." Those words kept playing in my head as I folded tiny pink baby clothes into the drawer. My hands were shaking, but I made them stop. Solana needed a mother who stayed strong when bad things happened."Emily, you should be resting in bed." Alejandro stood in the baby room doorway, carrying a wooden rocking chair. "Dr. Vega told you—""Dr. Vega said I need bed rest, not to be locked up like a prisoner." I held up a tiny yellow dress. "Besides, getting the baby's room ready is good for pregnant women. It helps us feel prepared.""Prepared for what?""For everything."Mateo ran through the door with his arms full of stuffed animals. "Look what I found downstairs! A whole dragon family for Solana!" He put them carefully on the baby changing table. "The mama dragon keeps the baby dragons safe from all the monsters."The afternoon light came through the windows, making the room feel warm and golden. Dust motes danced in the air like tiny fairies."That's perfect, sweetie
The big house sat on fifty acres of rolling green hills, surrounded by tall iron gates and security cameras that watched our every move. From my bedroom window, I could see guards walking around the edges of the property like ghosts in the morning fog."It's beautiful here," Alejandro said, putting my overnight bag down on the huge bed. "Peaceful and quiet."I stared out at the perfectly cut gardens and felt my chest get tight. Beautiful, yes. Peaceful, maybe. But it was still like being in jail."Emily?" You okay?""I'm fine." The lie came out automatically. "Just tired."But I wasn't fine. After months of fighting to be free, here I was locked away again—even if it was to keep me safe. The irony of it all wasn't lost on me.Dr. Patricia Vega came an hour later, carrying a machine that could show pictures of babies and wearing a warm smile that made me feel better right away."Let's check on baby Solana, shall we?" She spread cold, slippery gel across my belly and put the wand on top
The hospital ceiling had forty-seven white squares. I had counted them seventeen times since I woke up three hours ago. The fluorescent lights buzzed softly above me, making everything look cold and sterile."Emily, you need to stop looking at the ceiling and listen to me." Dr. Martinez pulled a chair next to my bed. Her face was serious but caring. "The painful muscle squeezes have stopped completely. Your body is not trying to have the baby anymore. The baby's heartbeat is strong and steady.""But I was bleeding—""That bleeding happened because you were too worried and stressed. It happens a lot when pregnant women are under too much pressure. But Emily, if you don't calm down and rest, next time your body might really try to have the baby too early."Alejandro held my hand tight. "What does that mean?""You have to stay in bed for at least two weeks. No working, no worrying, no talking to reporters." Dr. Martinez spoke in a way that meant I had no choice. "Emily, you tried for yea
"Here's the truth."I pulled out my phone and connected it to the wireless speaker Sofia had set up for me. The first recording began to play—Carlos's voice, clear as day, talking to Daniela about their plan to "break Emily down slowly."The reporters went completely silent. Cameras zoomed in on my face as Carlos's words filled the morning air:"She trusts too easily. Make her doubt herself first, then cut her off from her friends. Once she's alone and confused, she'll sign anything."Daniela's laugh followed, cruel and cold: "American women are so weak. Push a little, and they break."I let the recording play for thirty seconds before stopping it. "That was recorded six months before my car accident. Before I supposedly 'lost my mind' from trauma. They were planning this destruction from the beginning."A reporter called out, "Mrs. Reyes, where did these recordings come from?""My stepson's bedroom. Mateo lived with this hatred every day. A ten-year-old boy, forced to listen to adult