Part 2
For the first time since I had met him, Alejandro Mendoza stopped performing.
Doña Victoria grabbed his sleeve. Vanessa’s mouth opened slightly. Ricardo’s smile froze, but only for a second. He stood, smooth as oil.
“Your Honor, this is theatrics. My client is a respected developer. Mrs. Mendoza has fabricated a fantasy because she cannot accept the marriage is over.”
The judge opened the folder.
I did not speak while he read the first page. Silence has power when the truth is already moving.
The first document was a certified paternity test. Alejandro had sworn in his emergency petition that he had been separated from me for eleven months and had “reason to doubt” my son’s paternity. The test said otherwise. So did the hospital record from the night Alejandro visited my room under a false name because he didn’t want Vanessa to know.
The second section was medical. Three emergency visits. Two “falls.” One fractured wrist. Each report carried the same note: patient anxious, husband answers most questions. But behind those reports were photographs, dated and printed, taken by a nurse who had quietly given me a card for a domestic violence advocate.
Ricardo shifted. “Medical records do not prove causation.”
“No,” I said. “But text messages help.”
The judge turned the page.
Alejandro’s voice filled the courtroom when the clerk played the audio transcript from my phone: Sign the custody transfer before the birth, Elena, or I’ll make sure the court thinks you’re insane. I own the people who decide what mothers deserve.
A murmur moved through the room.
Alejandro slammed his hand on the table. “That’s edited.”
“It was authenticated,” I said.
Ricardo narrowed his eyes. “By whom?”
I looked at him calmly. “By the same forensic lab your firm uses in corporate fraud cases.”
That was the first clue that they had targeted the wrong woman.
Before I became Alejandro’s wife, before Doña Victoria taught her friends to call me “the charity girl,” I had been a forensic accountant for the state attorney’s office. I knew how powerful men hid things. I knew how lawyers laundered threats through paperwork. I knew the difference between a mistake and a pattern.
The black tabs were financial records.
Alejandro had moved marital assets into three shell companies after I announced my pregnancy. He had paid a private investigator to follow me to therapy. He had transferred fifty thousand dollars to a clinic administrator two days before a false psychiatric summary appeared in Ricardo’s custody filing.
The judge’s jaw tightened.
Ricardo finally lost color.
“Mrs. Mendoza,” the judge said, “how did you obtain these bank records?”
I touched my son’s blanket. “From accounts bearing my forged signature, Your Honor. As joint owner, I had legal access. I also filed a police report for identity theft last week.”
Alejandro stood so fast his chair struck the railing.
“You little snake,” he hissed.
My baby stirred, then settled when I kissed his head.
The judge’s gavel cracked like thunder. “Sit down, Mr. Mendoza.”…
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