Pregnant Valeria Was Bleeding. Then Her Father Arrived With Proof-ruby - Chainityai

Pregnant Valeria Was Bleeding. Then Her Father Arrived With Proof-ruby

Valeria Robles had once believed marriage was supposed to make a woman feel chosen. For the first year with Martín, she kept that belief carefully folded inside her, even when the first small cruelties began to appear.

He did not shout at first. He corrected. He sighed. He told her she was too sensitive when she cried after another doctor visit, too dramatic when she prayed before a test result.

Their house in San Ángel had been the one place Valeria still felt anchored. The walls held her mother’s framed photographs, her blue cups, her fresh flowers, and the quiet order she created when everything else felt uncertain.

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Martín liked the address, the polished gate, the old trees outside, and the way people looked at him when he said he lived there. What he never liked was being reminded that the house had never belonged to him.

Don Ernesto Robles had placed the property in Valeria’s name before the wedding. It was not a romantic gesture. It was protection. He had seen something in Martín that his daughter, still in love, refused to see.

Five years passed without Valeria visiting her father’s home. Pride stood between them first. Then shame. Then Martín, who always found a reason she was too tired, too emotional, or too pregnant to go.

The pregnancy changed everything. After years of treatments, losses, and prayers to the Virgin of Guadalupe, Valeria stopped trusting happiness when it arrived. She would wait for good news, then brace for it to be taken back.

At seven months, the doctor finally smiled without pity. The baby’s heartbeat was strong. The bleeding risk had lowered. Valeria gripped the edge of the examination table and asked twice if he was sure.

“She is stable,” the doctor said, and the word she made Valeria’s throat close. A daughter. A living, stubborn little girl who had stayed when Valeria had been terrified she would not.

That afternoon, Valeria bought pan dulce in Las Águilas because Martín loved the sugar crust when it was still warm. The paper bag steamed faintly against her palm as she drove home through traffic.

She imagined telling him in the kitchen. She imagined his hand on her belly, his face softening, maybe even the return of the man she kept telling herself had only been buried by stress.

Instead, music leaked through the front door before she even turned the handle. It was not loud enough for a party. It was intimate. Careless. The kind of music people play when they think nobody will interrupt.

Then came the laugh. A woman’s laugh, bright and relaxed, drifting out of Valeria’s kitchen as if it had every right to be there. Valeria’s hand tightened around the bag until sugar dust spilled.

Camila was standing by the counter in Valeria’s silk robe. The robe was pale, expensive, and private, a first-anniversary gift Valeria had worn only on nights when she still believed her marriage was tender.

Camila poured tequila from the bottle saved for celebrations. She did it barefoot, unhurried, with one shoulder bare and her mouth shaped into a smile before Valeria had even said her name.

“Oh, Valeria,” Camila said. “I thought you’d take longer.”

There are sentences that reveal an affair. There are tones that reveal a routine. Valeria understood both at once. Camila had not been caught entering the house. She had been caught belonging there.

Martín appeared behind her, not shirtless, not panicked, not even properly ashamed. His white shirt was pressed. His hair was neat. His face carried irritation first and guilt only after.

“Take off my clothes,” Valeria said.

“Don’t start,” Martín answered, as though his pregnant wife had interrupted a meeting instead of walking into betrayal. The pain of that tone made her hands tremble harder than the sight of Camila.

Camila stepped forward with the lazy cruelty of someone protected by a man’s silence. “You’re pregnant, not sick,” she said. “Don’t make a scene.”

“You’re in my house,” Valeria answered.

Camila laughed and looked at Martín. He said nothing. In that silence, Valeria saw the cups Camila had used, the bed she had entered, the framed photographs she had walked past without shame.

“I’m calling my father,” Valeria said.

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