ART 1
“I’m busy with your sister’s party. Why would you bring another burden into the world?”
Those were the first words my mother said after I told her I had just given birth.
My body still ached. I was exhausted in a way I couldn’t fully explain—somewhere between wanting to cry, sleep, and simply disappear. But when they placed my daughter in my arms, warm and fragile, something shifted inside me.
I named her Lily.
For the first time in a long while, I felt something pure.
Still, I made the mistake of calling my mother.
A small part of me believed she might respond differently this time.
She answered on the third ring. In the background, I heard music, laughter—it was my sister Valeria’s birthday party.
“I had the baby,” I said softly. “Mom… it’s a girl.”
There was a pause.
Then her voice, cold and distant:
“I told you I’m busy. Don’t ruin your sister’s day.”
In the background, Valeria’s voice cut through the noise:
“Did she really have the baby today? She always makes everything about herself.”
I froze.
My mother ended the call with:
“Stop crying. No one cares. Call someone else.”
Then she hung up.
I stared at the screen in silence until a nurse gently asked if I needed help contacting someone.
For years, I had learned to say no.
But this time… I couldn’t.
“Can you try my husband?” I asked.
The nurse hesitated.
“The one who hasn’t answered?”
I closed my eyes.
“Yes.”
Because that was the other problem.
Diego hadn’t shown up.
The contractions had started after midnight. I called him repeatedly. His only response:
“I’m in a meeting. I’ll come as soon as I can.”
After that—nothing.
By 7 a.m., the only people who had held my daughter were me and a kind nurse.
I kissed Lily’s forehead and whispered:
“You matter. You are loved. You are everything.”
A promise—stronger than anything I had just heard.
The next morning, my mother and sister arrived.
Perfectly dressed. Calm smiles. A small pink gift bag in hand.
Too perfect.
Too rehearsed.
“Mariana, we need to talk,” my mother said.
And in that moment, I understood—
They hadn’t come for me.
They wanted something.
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