He Tried To Take My Baby, Until My Hidden Father Entered Court-nhu9999 - Chainityai

He Tried To Take My Baby, Until My Hidden Father Entered Court-nhu9999

Marcus signed the divorce papers with the same smile he used at weddings.

That was the part I could not stop staring at.

Not the papers.

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Not Victoria standing behind him in a white dress.

Not the necklace at her throat, the diamond pendant I had once thought was meant for me.

The smile.

I was seven months pregnant, sitting across from the man I had loved for five years, while he tapped the page and told me to be practical.

He said the apartment was in his name.

He said the accounts were easier if he controlled them.

He said custody would be smoother if I signed early and stopped making everyone uncomfortable.

Victoria rested her manicured hand on his shoulder.

She looked at my belly with a soft little wince, like my daughter was an inconvenience someone had left in the room.

I folded my hands under the table.

If I lifted them, he would see they were shaking.

Three weeks earlier, I had still believed we were tired, not broken.

I had cooked his favorite dinner for our anniversary and waited while the candles burned down twice.

He came home late, kissed no one, touched no one, and slept while the chicken dried under foil.

The next day, I found the Tiffany receipt in his jacket.

I let myself believe it was for me because hope can be foolish when it is starving.

Then I brought lunch to his office and found him by the window with Victoria in his arms.

The necklace was already around her neck.

Marcus did not beg.

He did not stumble.

He sighed, as if I had interrupted a meeting.

That was the first death.

The second came when I went to the bank and learned our joint accounts were frozen.

The third came when my pharmacy card declined for prenatal vitamins.

The fourth came when my best friend called crying because Marcus had shown her fake messages proving I was the cheater.

By the end of the week, I had no money, no insurance, and no friends brave enough to believe me.

I had eight hundred forty-seven dollars in an old savings account and a daughter kicking under my ribs like a tiny fist against a locked door.

My mother told me to come home to Ohio.

For one minute, I wanted to.

Then I imagined Emma growing up with a mother who ran every time a cruel man raised his voice.

I called Legal Aid instead.

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