A Pregnant Daughter At The Door, A Black Notebook, And The Montoya Lie-mdue - Chainityai

A Pregnant Daughter At The Door, A Black Notebook, And The Montoya Lie-mdue

I had lived on that farm in Asturias long enough for people to mistake silence for emptiness. The orchard made that easy. Apple trees, stone walls, rain that came sideways, and a woman who kept her head down.

Isabella grew up between those trees. She learned to read at the kitchen table, learned to climb the low branches before she learned to lie, and learned that work could make a house honest.

When Javier Montoya first came to that table, he looked almost embarrassed by his own last name. He brought flowers, helped stack firewood, and called me señora with a humility that seemed practiced but convincing.

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I watched him watch Isabella. At twenty-three, she still believed love could polish the rough edges off a man. I wanted to believe it, too, because mothers sometimes lend hope to daughters.

The Montoyas lived in a mansion near the coast, behind iron gates and old cypress trees. Their name sat on banks, legal offices, shipping companies, and charity boards where people smiled before counting favors.

Doña Catalina Montoya was not loud when she insulted. She was worse. She was precise. At the engagement dinner, she touched Isabella’s sleeve and asked whether the fabric had been borrowed.

Javier squeezed Isabella’s hand beneath the table that night. I saw it. Later, he told me he would protect her from every cruelty his family had taught him to call tradition.

I gave him my blessing. I gave him the fruit preserves Isabella loved, my grandmother’s wool shawl, and the trust of a mother who had survived enough to know trust is never small.

After the wedding, Isabella called less often. When she did, she kept her voice bright, the way people polish a window so no one outside can see the room burning behind it.

She said Catalina was demanding. She said Javier was under pressure. She said the servants were kind when no one watched. Every sentence arrived wrapped in an excuse she had learned to fold neatly.

By the fifth month of her pregnancy, I heard pauses where laughter used to be. I asked direct questions. She answered around them. Fear does that. It teaches the tongue to walk in circles.

The night she came home, the storm had already broken two branches from the old apple tree near the well. Rain hammered the roof so hard the house seemed to breathe through stone.

At 2:00 in the morning, the door shook. I remember the sound because it was not like weather. Weather has rhythm. This was desperate, human, and uneven, a fist losing strength.

When I opened the door, Isabella stood barefoot on the porch. Mud striped her legs. Her expensive dress hung torn. One cheek had swollen purple, and both hands were locked around her belly.

I did not scream. Screaming would have helped no one. I pulled her inside, wrapped her in blankets, and felt how violently her shoulders shook beneath the wet fabric.

Her phone hit the floor and lit up with Catalina’s name. It vibrated again and again, crawling across the boards like a trapped insect. Isabella begged me not to answer.

If I called the police, she said, the Montoyas would erase everything. Money, lawyers, contacts. She did not say the words like drama. She said them like someone who had watched it happen.

Then she told me about the mansion. The early mornings. The orders given before the servants rose. The food pushed toward her like punishment. The laughter tucked behind napkins.

At dinner, Catalina once poured sauce into Isabella’s lap and waited. Forks froze halfway to mouths. A glass hovered near Javier’s lips. One cousin studied the saltcellar. Nobody moved.

That silence hurt her almost more than the insult. One person can strike you. A room can teach you that the strike is normal, that your pain is inconvenient, that mercy is vulgar.

When Isabella announced the baby, Catalina looked at her belly and called the child a brat from a thieving cat. Javier said nothing then. Silence was his first betrayal.

The second came that night on the stairs. Drunk, flushed, and furious, Javier shouted that she had to make the baby disappear. Then he lifted his foot toward her.

She ran without a purse, without a coat, down roads that turned to black rivers under the rain. Every step must have hurt. Still, she kept both hands over the child.

She reached me because some part of her still believed that farm was safer than any mansion. I held her and told her no one would touch her again. I meant every word.

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