My mother-in-law, a woman of boundless aristocracy, humiliated me at my wedding by snapping, “How dare you sit in my place without asking?” But then… My mother-in-law humiliated me again at my wedding, saying, “How dare you sit in my place without my permission?” She pressured my husband into divorce while I was in the hospital, leaving me to give birth alone. The next day, he was shocked by what he’d seen on television and called me in a panic… She wore pearls, a hostess’s smile, and such self-assurance that she seemed to turn heads. I wore an ivory wedding dress that no longer concealed my twins beneath the satin, and the moment the band launched into another old love song, I realized I was the only one at my own reception who hadn’t been invited to the real party. My husband was reaching for another glass instead of offering me his hand. My mother-in-law was guarding the head table as if it belonged to a dynasty, not a family. I then made the smallest imaginable mistake, and the entire room reprimanded me. The chair seemed empty. That was all. My back ached terribly, my twins were squeezing me tightly under the satin and whalebone, and all I wanted was a minute of peace before the cake. The ballroom was ablaze with candlelight and crystal, waiters bustling between the white-clothed tables, and the band was playing soft, romantic music—as long as my life wasn’t already slipping away. I slumped into the carved chair by the head table. “Olivia, no. Not there.” Brenda didn’t raise her voice. She never needed to. Anyway, all the conversations around us were fading away. “I’m sorry,” I said. “I thought…” “You were mistaken.” Her smile didn’t fade. “This seat isn’t for you. Please get up.” I looked at James. He was a few feet away, a glass in his hand, frozen in that all-too-familiar expression, as if his discomfort justified his silence. “James?” He looked down. Brenda leaned toward me, her pearls sparkling in the light. “Go upstairs and rest. We’ll finish the evening later.” Us. Not the bride and groom. Not husband and wife. Us. I got up because the babies were heavy and my pride was heavy. I left before the tears started to fall, waited for footsteps behind me, and heard nothing but music. James arrived at the suite at dawn, missed the bed, and slept on the carpet in his tuxedo. Sitting barefoot by the window, one hand on my stomach, I stared at the lights of the highway below the hotel and wondered when love had turned into something that left me alone in a room paid for by others. The beginning had been so different. We had met in front of the university hospital,While I juggled anatomy classes, pharmacy shifts, and a future I’d built from scratch, I’d left the foster care system as soon as I turned 18, without a family name to rely on, only my grades, my work, and my stubbornness. At first, James appreciated that about me. He said I made him feel secure. I loved how easily I could love him. Then I got pregnant. With twins. When Brenda found out, the atmosphere around her changed. The wedding date was postponed four times. There was always an excuse: a scheduling conflict, a location clash, a work commitment. When she finally agreed to the ceremony, it was impossible to hide my pregnancy, and I could tell how happy it made her. After the wedding, the house became colder. James started sleeping in the guest room. Brenda began talking about my future as if I were a temporary complication. “Once the babies are here,” she said one afternoon, “we’ll have to get organized.” Three weeks later, my contractions started just after midnight. I was standing in Brenda’s bedroom door in my robe, one hand under my belly, the other against the wall. “I need to go to the hospital,” I whispered. She glanced at the clock behind me before looking back at me. “You’re early.” “I know. Please.” When I arrived in town, James was “away on business,” his phone unreachable except for voicemail. The delivery room was cold, bright, and warmer than my wedding had been in the past few weeks. Nurses were adjusting pillows. A resident explained what they were monitoring with twins. A nursing assistant named Joyce came by regularly to check on me, her hands warm and her shoes comfortable. The next day, I asked her for a favor. “Could you take a note to him?” I asked. “Just to make sure he gets it.” She nodded. “I’ll go after work.” When Joyce returned the next morning, she paused in the doorway, so long that my heart began to clench. “He’s okay,” she said first. “Did you find him?” She nodded. “I’m leaving the house.” “Did he read it?” Her gaze softened. “Olivia…” “Please.” “He said there must have been a mistake. He said he didn’t know anyone by that name.” For a second, I truly didn’t understand. “My name?” Joyce nodded. The first contraction, violent, hit me before I could say anything. Everything suddenly became animated: monitors, footsteps, bright lights, Joyce calling for the doctor. My body took over. At sunrise, I gave birth to my twins alone. First a boy. Then his sister.My face was red and…furious and perfect. The following afternoon, the maternity ward was buzzing with activity. A local news crew had come to film a report on the babies born that spring, during the town’s fundraising weekend. I almost refused, but Joyce convinced me to do my hair. Her brother Paul arrived with flowers, a folded blanket, and the most serene smile I’d seen in months. “You don’t have to make it pretty,” I told him as the producer adjusted the light by the window. Paul looked at the twins, then at me. “You’ve already done the hardest part.” So I stood there in the discharge room, exhausted and patched up by sheer willpower, while Paul helped me with the diaper bag and Joyce tucked the babies in. The camera captured the little family I had left, not the one I had lost. An hour later, while Joyce was putting my daughter in her car seat and Paul was carrying the flowers, my phone started buzzing on the hospital blanket. James. Again. And again. On the fourth call, a voicemail came through before I even touched the screen. He sounded breathless, panicked, like someone who had just seen something live on television and thought had vanished without a trace. It was the first time I’d ever seen his name without feeling any emotion. What happened after that first call was completely unexpected.

Alejandro begged me to stay. He blamed it on stress, alcohol, anything but the truth. And I stayed, out of love, pride, or perhaps confusion.

We ended the wedding with forced smiles and stiff photos.

Seven months later, I was nine months pregnant and living in a house that was supposed to be ours, but where everything had been chosen by his mother.

One morning, very early, my water broke.

Alejandro took me to a private hospital in Madrid. I was in pain, scared, and upset.

While I was being prepared for childbirth, I heard voices outside the room: hers, high-pitched and authoritative.

Thirty minutes later, Alejandro entered.

He didn’t look at me.

“When all this is over… we will have to separate,” she said.

It took me a while to understand.

“Are you talking about divorce?”

“My mother spoke with the lawyer. It’s the best solution.”

She said that while I was in the middle of working.

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