“If you’re going to save me from another lie, call me by my name.”
Alma told me everything. Her sister Nadia had worked for Marco. He had promised to help when he found out she was pregnant, then showed up after she died claiming the boy needed “legal protection.” He had registered the child as his own, accessed Nadia’s worker’s comp settlement, and had already been moving money from her life insurance account.
The baby had his long lashes and the innocent face of someone who doesn’t yet know how cruel the world can be. Seeing him hurt more than all the photos combined.
“Why did you look for me?” I asked. “Because I found messages where he said he was going to sell your house in Lincoln Park to settle things,” Alma said.
“Then I saw your name on some paperwork. I thought you were part of the plan.” “No,” I said. “I was just the piggy bank he was planning to rob.”
Steven reached out for Alma’s folder.
Inside were birth certificates, screenshots, and notes signed by Marco. There was also a letter from a private lender where my name appeared as the applicant for a massive loan I had never requested. When I saw my forged signature, I didn’t feel sadness anymore.
I felt a brutal, cold clarity. “That is not my handwriting.” “I know,” Steven said. “And that changes everything.”
Then, through the cafe window, I saw Marco’s car pull up illegally across the curb — the way men park when they think their urgency is more important than the rules.
Romina was with him. Marco stormed in. “Gaby, we’re leaving.
Now.” No one moved. Alma stood and placed a protective hand on the stroller. “Don’t you get near this child.” I laid my phone on the table, recording.
Marco looked at it and lowered his voice. “Turn it off.” “No.” “You’re destroying this family, Gaby.” I laughed — not hysterical, the laugh of someone who had finally seen behind the curtain. “You destroyed this family when you tried to sell my house, forge my signature, and steal from an orphaned baby.”
Romina let out a choked sound.
“Steal from a baby? Marco, what did you do?” He turned on her with pure venom. “You wanted to move to Austin, didn’t you?
You wanted the new house, the new life. Don’t act like a saint now.” I watched her realize in that moment that she wasn’t the love of his life. She was just another instrument.
Another forged signature. Another fool on his waiting list. “You told me Gaby was going to agree,” she whispered.
“You said the house was half yours!” “Shut up!” Steven spoke up calmly. “Marco, you need to leave. We have evidence of forgery, attempted fraud, and identity theft.
Everything is being recorded.” Marco leaned over the table. “You won’t survive on your own, Gaby.” I looked him straight in the eye. “I was never alone.
I was just in bad company.”
We went to the police station that night. Steven knew exactly which forms to file so they wouldn’t treat me like a scorned wife but as a victim of a crime. Alma carried the baby against her chest.
Romina sat in the corner, her makeup a mess, finally silent. Marco didn’t show up. He went into hiding.
At 2:00 AM, I stood in front of my house on Lincoln Park.
Every brick paid for by my exhaustion — my boutique sales, my late nights, my worn-out shoes. “We’re changing the locks right now,” Steven said. The locksmith arrived at 3:00 AM.
“You look calm, ma’am,” he said while working. “I’m not calm,” I told him. “I’m decided.”
At dawn, my kids arrived.
Mariana was furious; Diego was shaking with rage. I hugged them in the living room and finally, finally, I cried. Not to survive — because with them I didn’t have to be made of stone.
A few days later, Romina came to the door.
No red lipstick. No expensive wine. She had a USB drive and a bag of my things she had borrowed months ago.
“I’m not here to ask for forgiveness. But take this.” She left the USB on the table. “It’s everything.
Audios, texts, names. Marco was planning to have a broker forge your signature again if you said no to the bank. He even talked about trying to have you declared ‘unstable’ to get control of the assets.” I looked at her.
“You were never chosen, Romi. You were recruited.” That broke her more than any insult could. She left without a word.
October arrived with the smell of woodsmoke and crisp Chicago air.
I bought orange marigolds at the market. My son Diego asked if I was putting up an altar for my marriage. “No,” I said.
“I don’t put up altars for things I’ve buried without flowers.” That night, I sat alone in my kitchen. Before, the silence used to crush me. Now, it was company.
I looked at the blender — still there, next to the outlet where Marco had left his phone charging that afternoon.
Such a simple thing had opened the door to so much rot. A cable. A text.
A cruel sentence. The idiot should have dinner started by now. I stood up, washed my coffee mug, opened the window.
Outside, Lincoln Park was alive: a dog barking, a bus hissing, a couple laughing in the distance. I thought about Romina, about Marco, and about all the women who think that enduring is the same thing as loving. Before heading upstairs, I pressed my palm against the wall of my house.
“I’m still here,” I whispered. For the first time in twenty-two years, I didn’t say it to survive. I said it to begin.
