Part 2: For a second, Esteban forgot how to breathe.

He stood frozen beside the hospital bed, still in his wedding suit, staring at the woman he had mourned for years like she was a ghost accusing him from the edge of death.

“What?” he said.

Yohandra’s lips trembled. “After I told your father I was pregnant, two men came to my apartment. They said you had chosen your future… and that there was no place for us in it.”

Esteban shook his head instantly. “No. No, I never—”

“They gave me money,” she whispered. “Not to help. To vanish.”

The little girl stood quietly in the doorway now, clutching the photo to her chest.

Yohandra’s eyes filled with tears. “When I refused, the threats began. My landlord was paid to evict me. My clinic appointments were canceled. Every job I found disappeared by the next day. Then someone told me you had signed papers saying the child could never carry your name.”

Esteban grabbed the bedrail so hard his knuckles whitened.

“I never signed anything.”

The room went silent.

Because if he hadn’t done it…

then someone had done it in his name.

Yohandra slowly reached beneath her pillow and pulled out an old envelope, worn soft by years of being opened and closed. Inside was a photocopy of a legal agreement, signed Esteban Alejandro Ruiz.

He stared at it for half a second and knew immediately.

The signature was close.

Dangerously close.

But not his.

Only one person had ever practiced his signature that perfectly growing up.

Only one person had access to his father’s lawyers, his accounts, and the power to make people disappear quietly.

His older brother.

The same brother now sitting in the front row of the wedding hall beside Esteban’s father… pretending to be shocked by the groom’s sudden disappearance.

Yohandra looked at him weakly. “I thought you destroyed us.”

Esteban dropped to his knees beside the bed.

“I thought you abandoned me.”

The child stepped closer, tears sliding down her cheeks.

“Are you my father?” she asked.

Esteban looked up at her — really looked this time — and saw his own eyes in her face.

His whole body broke.

“Yes,” he said.

Yohandra began to cry silently.

But then the heart monitor changed.

One sharp sound.

Then another.

Nurses rushed in.

A doctor shouted for space.

Esteban stumbled back as they surrounded the bed.

The little girl started screaming for her mother.

And just before the staff pushed him out of the room, Yohandra used the last of her strength to raise one shaking finger toward him and whisper:

“Don’t go back to the wedding…”

Her breathing hitched.

Then she said the final words that made his blood turn cold:

“Your bride knew too.”

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