Thrown Out Pregnant in the Rain, Camila Found One Unexpected Witness-habe

I got pregnant while I was still in tenth grade.

For a long time, Camila believed that single sentence would be the only thing anyone remembered about her.

Not her grades.

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Not the way she helped her mother hang laundry before school.

Not the way she used to read under the kitchen table when the house was too loud.

Just that one sentence, whispered across sidewalks and repeated at shop counters until it became larger than the girl herself.

Camila Hernández was sixteen, though everyone in her small town in Jalisco suddenly spoke about her as if childhood had left her body the moment two pink lines appeared on a pregnancy test.

She was still in the equivalent of tenth grade.

Her backpack still carried a cracked ruler, two pencils with bitten ends, a Spanish notebook, and a folded permission slip for a school assembly she would never attend.

That was the detail she remembered later with the sharpest pain.

Not the shouting.

Not even the rain.

The permission slip.

It was dated March 14, and her mother had not signed it because the house had exploded before dinner.

By late afternoon, the rumor had already moved through town with the speed of something that wanted to be believed.

The woman at the corner store knew first because Camila had bought the test there with coins that smelled like metal and school dust.

Then one of the preparatoria girls saw the pale box in her bag.

Then someone told someone’s aunt.

By 5:17 p.m., the town knew enough to stare.

Camila walked home under a sky that had turned the color of dirty water.

The first rain began before she reached the blue house at the corner.

It was not heavy yet, only a cold mist that settled on her eyelashes and made the plastic bag in her hand cling to her fingers.

Inside that bag was the pregnancy test.

Inside Camila was a panic so large she could barely breathe around it.

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