Pregnant Wife Betrayed in San Ángel Until Her Father Arrived-habe

The first thing I remember is not the blood.

It is the sound of the paper bag tearing.

The pan dulce I had bought in Las Águilas slid across the tile when I fell, and sugar scattered near my hand like something festive had been ruined before it could even reach the table.

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For months, I had been measuring my life in appointments, injections, quiet prayers, and tiny medical phrases that decided whether I could breathe that day.

Stable.

Low risk for now.

Come back in two weeks.

Those words were not romantic, but to me they sounded like music.

I was seven months pregnant when I walked out of the clinic that afternoon with my daughter’s heartbeat printed on a prenatal monitoring sheet and my own hands shaking over the paper.

After years of treatments and losses, after too many mornings lighting candles before the Virgen de Guadalupe, after doctors who chose their words carefully because they knew hope could break a woman, I finally had something to tell my husband.

Our baby was stable.

Our daughter was stable.

For the first time in a long time, I allowed myself to imagine Martín smiling.

That was foolish, maybe, but marriage makes you loyal to memories even when the person standing in front of you has stopped earning them.

I remembered our first anniversary, when he gave me a silk robe and said I looked like I belonged in a house full of soft mornings.

I remembered him holding my hand outside a specialist’s office after the second loss, his thumb moving over my knuckles while I cried into my sleeve.

I remembered the early years when he used to say San Ángel was too quiet for him, but that our house felt peaceful because I was in it.

That was the trust signal I had given him.

A home.

A calendar full of medical appointments.

An alarm code.

A spare key.

A belief that even if love became tired, it would not become cruel.

The café receipt said 5:43 p.m. when I bought the pan dulce.

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