Her Ex Chased an Heir, but the Clinic Exposed His Perfect Future-felicia

Five minutes after Adrian Castillo signed our divorce papers, he ran toward a private clinic to celebrate the pregnancy he thought would replace the family he had just thrown away.

He left me sitting across from Attorney Bennett with the final page still warm under his pen.

The office smelled like leather polish, printer toner, and wet wool from the rain that had followed us downtown that morning.

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Outside the conference room, Noah sat on a leather sofa with his dinosaur backpack pressed against his chest.

Lily drew yellow flowers in a notebook because she believed flowers could make ugly places less sad.

Inside the room, their father looked at me and said, “If you want the children, take them. They’re nothing but d3ad weight while I build a new life.”

There are sentences that do not sound loud when they happen.

They simply make the world before them impossible to return to.

I did not scream.

I did not throw the pen at him.

I did not ask how a father could speak that way about a six-year-old boy and a four-year-old girl who still waited for him at windows.

My hands folded in my lap, and my knuckles pressed white against each other until the pain gave me something clean to hold.

Adrian’s phone buzzed before Attorney Bennett could slide the paperwork into order.

He answered with a smile I had not seen aimed at me in years.

“My love, it’s finished,” he said. “Yes, I’ll be there for the ultrasound. Today, we finally see the heir.”

The heir.

That was what mattered to him now.

Not Noah.

Not Lily.

Not the ten years we had spent building a life out of rent payments, school forms, midnight fevers, and promises he had once made with his hand over mine.

His sister Vanessa sat beside him with one ankle crossed over the other, wearing that satisfied look she used whenever she believed cruelty had been disguised well enough to pass as class.

“Well,” she said, “at least now there’s finally something worth celebrating after all this drama.”

I had known the Castillo family long enough to recognize the smell of a staged victory.

Margaret Castillo had taught her children that money could launder almost anything.

Vanessa had learned that silence was only shameful when it protected someone else.

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