The text from Lucy vibrated against my palm like a death sentence.
My knees buckled. I looked down at the infant in my arms—the child I had traded my soul for, the boy with David’s unmistakable, crescent-shaped birthmark mocking me from beneath his tiny left eyelid. The kid didn’t look like me. He looked like the blueprint of my own public execution.
“Mr. Mendez?” the nurse repeated, her voice cutting through the thick, sterile air of the delivery room. She held out a clipboard, a silver pen resting on top of the birth certificate paperwork. “We need your signature to finalize the paternal admission forms before we move the baby to the nursery. Sir?”
I looked at Valerie. The woman who had occupied my thoughts, my bed, and my bank account for the last year was staring fixedly at the ceiling, her jaw clenched, refusing to meet my eyes. The silent admission written across her pale face was louder than any confession.
“I… I need a moment,” I choked out.
I shoved the baby back into the nurse’s startled arms, ignored Valerie’s sharp, sudden intake of breath, and practically burst through the heavy double doors of the maternity ward. The hospital corridor was endless, a blur of fluorescent lights and the distant, agonizing sound of newborns crying. Every cry felt like a high-pitched laugh at my expense.
I collapsed into a plastic chair in the waiting area, my hands shaking so violently I almost dropped my phone.
My thumb hovered over Lucy’s text. Open the envelope I left in your drawer. Right there, you’re going to understand exactly why Valerie chose David, of all people…
My mind was a chaotic storm. Lucy was pregnant. My Lucy. The woman I had publicly humiliated, the woman I had branded as “broken” and “barren” to justify my own disgusting betrayal, was carrying my child. The medical impossibility that had haunted our eight-year marriage had miraculously vanished, leaving behind a cruel, divine irony. But what did David have to do with the envelope? Why David?
David wasn’t just my business partner; he was my childhood friend. We had built Mendez & Partners Architecture from the dirt up in Guadalajara. He knew my finances. He knew my marriage. He knew my deepest, darkest insecurity—my desperate, consuming desire to leave a legacy.
I dialed Lucy’s number. Ring. Ring. Ring.
“The subscriber you are trying to reach is unavailable,” the automated voice chirped.
I cursed out loud, drawing stares from an elderly couple sitting across from me. I dialed again. Voicemail. I sent a barrage of texts. Lucy, please answer me. What envelope? Lucy, I’m sorry. Please.
Nothing. Only the cold, gray ellipses of a conversation that had reached its terminal point.
Driven by a toxic cocktail of adrenaline and terror, I sprinted out of the hospital, leaving Valerie and David’s baby behind. I didn’t care about the five-million-dollar condo in Brickell. I didn’t care about the SUV. I didn’t care about the looks of disgust from the hospital staff. I needed to get to my house. I needed to find that envelope.
The drive from the hospital to the upscale residential district of Guadalajara felt like a fever dream. I pushed my Mercedes to its absolute limit, running two red lights, my heart hammering against my ribs like a trapped bird.
When I finally pulled into the driveway of the home I had shared with Lucy, the silence hit me like a physical blow. The lights were off. The garden, usually meticulously kept by Lucy, looked shadowed and abandoned in the twilight.
I unlocked the front door and stepped inside. The house was cold. The faint smell of lavender vanilla—Lucy’s signature scent—still lingered in the air, but the warmth was entirely gone. Her keys weren’t on the counter. Her coat was missing from the rack.
I bounded up the stairs two at a time, heading straight for the master bedroom. I opened my mahogany dresser, my hands tearing through neatly folded shirts until my fingers struck something stiff and metallic.
Deep in the back of the drawer lay a thick, manila envelope. It didn’t have my name on it. It had the logo of Advanced Fertility & Genetics Clinic of Guadalajara.