The real break came not in a courtroom, but in a hospital corridor that smelled of antiseptic and second chances. At thirty-two weeks, with contractions too early and monitors blinking like warnings, Diego arrived breathless, clutching a bouquet he immediately forgot on a chair. For the first time, he didn’t speak in accusations; he spoke in fragments—“I was scared,” “I thought you’d leave first,” “I couldn’t be the one fooled.” When the nurse adjusted the belt around my belly and both heartbeats thundered through the room, his knees visibly weakened. “They’re mine,” he whispered, not as a claim, but as an admission of how wrong he’d been. I looked at him, at the man who had dragged my name through timelines and group chats, and realized that forgiveness was not an obligation I owed, but a currency I could cho… Continues…
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