Marisol slides a folder toward you. “I also want the clinic that performed his vasectomy.”
“Why?”
“Because if he skipped the follow-up and lied, that helps. If he had a failed vasectomy and knew, that helps more.”
Your stomach twists. “And if he never had one?”
Marisol’s eyes lift.
You both sit in silence.
Because suddenly, the one thing you had accepted as fact becomes a question.
Did Diego really have a vasectomy?
Or did he invent the perfect accusation before the pregnancy ever happened?
Two days later, your answer arrives in the ugliest way possible.
Paola posts a photo.
Not a direct announcement.
Worse.
A soft, staged picture of baby shoes beside a coffee cup.
Caption:
Sometimes blessings arrive after storms.
Your phone nearly slips from your hand.
Marisol sees your face and grabs it.
She looks at the screen.
“Oh,” she says coldly. “She’s stupid.”
You stare at the tiny shoes.
“She’s pregnant.”
“Yes.”
“She knew.”
“Probably.”
You feel the room tilt.
“How far along?”
Marisol zooms in on the image. There is a small appointment card half-visible near the coffee cup. Most people would not notice it. But Marisol is not most people.
The card shows the edge of a date.
And the name of a clinic.
“Got you,” Marisol whispers.
Within twenty-four hours, she has a subpoena request drafted.
Within three days, your attorney formally files for divorce, temporary possession of the marital home, financial support, preservation of evidence, and an injunction preventing Diego from harassing you or spreading claims about paternity before testing.
Diego responds with rage.
Not through court.
Through text.
You’re making this ugly.
You stare at the message, then screenshot it.
Another arrives.
You know what you did.
Screenshot.
Then:
Don’t think that ultrasound proves anything.
Screenshot.
Then:
If you try to take the house, I’ll make sure everyone knows what kind of woman you are.
Screenshot.
Marisol reads them and smiles like a shark.
“Keep going, Diego,” she says. “Make my job easier.”
At the first hearing, Diego walks in with Paola.
That alone tells the judge almost everything.
Paola wears a beige dress and holds her stomach in a way that makes sure everyone sees. Diego sits beside her, jaw tight, looking like a man who expected the world to clap for his suffering but accidentally walked into a room with rules.
You sit with Marisol.
Your hands are cold.
Your baby is the size of a lime, according to the app you downloaded and check every morning like prayer.
When the judge asks why Paola is present, Diego’s attorney says she is “emotional support.”
Marisol stands.
“Your Honor, Ms. Paola is not a party to this divorce. She is, however, the extramarital partner involved in my client’s defamation claims and potentially relevant to financial dissipation.”
Paola’s face turns red.
The judge looks over his glasses.
“Ms. Paola may wait outside.”
Diego starts to object.
His attorney touches his arm.
Paola leaves.
You do not look at her.
That feels better than looking.
Diego’s attorney argues that he left because he believed you were unfaithful due to his vasectomy.
Marisol simply hands over the ultrasound report.
Then she hands over medical literature explaining that sterility is not immediate after vasectomy and must be confirmed by semen analysis.
Then she asks for proof Diego completed his post-procedure testing.
Diego’s attorney hesitates.
The judge notices.
“Do you have that documentation?”
Diego looks down.
His attorney clears his throat. “We are in the process of obtaining it.”
Marisol stands again.
“Your Honor, my client was accused publicly and privately of infidelity based on a medical claim Mr. Ramirez has not substantiated. He then abandoned the marital home, introduced his affair partner into legal discussions, attempted to pressure my pregnant client into signing a one-sided divorce agreement, and included a reimbursement clause based on paternity assumptions contradicted by current medical dating.”
The judge’s face does not change.
But his pen stops moving.
That is when you know he heard it.
The temporary order gives you exclusive use of the house.
Diego must continue paying his share of the mortgage.
He is ordered not to contact you directly except through attorneys.
He is warned not to make public statements about paternity.
Outside the courtroom, Diego waits near the elevators.
Paola is beside him again.
He looks at you with hatred.
“You’re proud of yourself?” he asks.
Marisol steps forward, but you raise a hand.
You look at Diego calmly.
“No,” you say. “I’m protecting my child from the man who called him a mistake before hearing his heartbeat.”
His face flickers.
Not guilt.
Annoyance.
That hurts less than you expect.
Paola mutters, “You’re unbelievable.”
You turn to her.
For the first time, you let yourself really see her.
The perfect hair. The soft dress. The hand on her stomach. The woman who sat across from you at your own kitchen table months ago asking for pozole recipes while sleeping with your husband.
“No,” you say. “I was believable. That’s why you had to work so hard to make me look guilty.”
Paola looks away first.
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