PART 2
That night, I didn’t argue anymore. I went straight to a hotel on Reforma with Camila wrapped tightly in my arms. During the ride, she didn’t cry. That frightened me more than a tantrum would have. She only held on to my neck like she was afraid someone might take her away.
In the hotel room, I ordered hot soup, soft chicken, fruit, and warm milk. When the food arrived, Camila stared at the tray with hunger and uncertainty.
“Mommy, can I eat this?”
Her question broke my heart.
“Of course, sweetheart. It’s all for you.”
She ate slowly, as if she needed permission for every bite.
Afterward, I gave her a warm bath. When I helped her into her pajamas, I saw the marks on her arms and legs.
I froze.
“Camila, who did this?”
She looked down.
“Don’t say anything, Mommy. Grandma will get mad.”
My stomach turned.
Then Daniel called. I answered only to hear what he would say.
“Mariana, what is wrong with you? You embarrassed my mother. You made everyone look terrible over something so small.”
“Small?” I asked. “Your daughter was outside in the cold, eating stale bread.”
Doña Carmen’s voice shouted in the background.
“I took care of that brat for three years, and this is how she thanks me? Ungrateful woman!”
I hung up.
Then I blocked Daniel, his mother, Valeria, and everyone else who had been living off me.
I opened my banking app. I canceled the monthly deposit to Doña Carmen. I deactivated every extra card. I stopped automatic payments for bills, deliveries, memberships, and purchases.
Then I called my lawyer, Mr. Herrera.
“I want a divorce. I want full custody of my daughter. And I want my apartment back.”
The apartment was not Daniel’s. I had bought it before our marriage. I paid for it. I furnished it. His family lived there only because I believed they loved my daughter.
The next morning, I took Camila to a pediatrician. The diagnosis was clear: low weight, stress, poor sleep, and signs of repeated mistreatment.
The doctor looked at me seriously.
“This needs to be reported.”
“Report it,” I said.
My lawyer filed the complaint and sent a formal notice: Daniel and his family had seven days to leave my property.
Back at the apartment, their comfortable life began falling apart.
Doña Carmen tried to pay at the supermarket, but her card was declined. Valeria went to pick up a designer bag she had reserved and couldn’t pay. Daniel received a call from the bank: all his supplementary cards had been canceled.
“Mariana is just throwing a tantrum,” Valeria said. “Daniel should go bring her back.”
But at noon, a court officer knocked on the door.
“On behalf of Mrs. Mariana Robles, the legal owner of this property, you are notified that you must vacate within seven days.”
Doña Carmen screamed that the apartment belonged to her son.
The officer calmly replied:
“The deed is under Mrs. Mariana Robles’ name.”
That afternoon, Daniel called me from another number. My lawyer answered.
“Mr. Reyes, from now on, all communication will go through legal channels. The divorce petition is being filed today.”
There was silence.
“Divorce?” Daniel whispered.
But the worst part was still ahead.
That night, I remembered the apartment cameras. I had installed them so I could check on Camila while traveling, even though Doña Carmen always wanted them turned off.
I opened the app.
I watched the footage.
And what I saw made me understand something terrible.
Daniel had not only failed as my husband.
He had failed as a father.