Eight years, and he needed only two months after a vasectomy to call you a whore.
By morning, Marisol has already pulled Diego’s public records, employment details, and the house documents.
The house is in both your names.
Not his.
Both.
That matters.
The mortgage has been paid mostly from your salary as a dental office manager, though Diego loves telling people he “carries the household.” You have receipts. Bank transfers. Tax records.
Marisol sits across from you at her kitchen table with coffee and a legal pad.
“Here’s what we do,” she says. “We file first.”
You stare at her. “Divorce?”
“Yes. But not the sad kind where you apologize for being abandoned. The strategic kind.”
Your hand moves to your stomach.
“What about the baby?”
“We establish timeline. We request medical records. We preserve evidence. We document defamation. We secure the house.”
“Defamation?”
She raises an eyebrow. “He publicly implied you cheated. His mother spread it. Paola participated. The neighborhood heard it. His social media post is still up.”
You remember the caption.
Sometimes life takes away a lie to give you peace.
You had read it while vomiting.
Now it looks different.
Not like heartbreak.
Like liability.
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.”