My husband divorced me at 8 months pregnant, then planned to marry his mistress at 3:00 p.m. “You have other priorities now,” she told me outside court. I walked away smiling because my folder held the one document neither of them had checked.
Damien pushed his eight-month-pregnant wife toward the courthouse doors.
His mistress held the umbrella.
I held the folder that was about to ruin both of them.
At 9:30 a.m., outside Miami-Dade Family Court, rain slid down the black SUV windows while my ankles throbbed inside flats I could barely keep on. The air smelled like wet concrete, expensive cologne, and the bitter coffee my mother had brought but I could not drink.
Damien stood under Ruth’s umbrella in a charcoal suit.
She wore ivory.
Ivory.
To my divorce hearing.
Her lipstick was fresh, her nails pale pink, and her left hand kept drifting toward the diamond he had given her before he had even taken mine off legally.
“Cristina,” she said softly, eyes dropping to my belly, “I hope there are no hard feelings.”
Damien checked his watch.
“We’re expected upstairs at ten.”
I adjusted the courthouse folder against my stomach.
Inside were the divorce papers.
But beneath them were three things Damien had never seen.
An apartment lease.
A bank report.
And one sealed medical record.
Ruth smiled again.
“Damien needed someone who could keep up with him professionally. You have other priorities now.”
My son kicked once beneath my ribs.
I looked at her hand on my husband’s arm.
Then I looked at Damien.
He did not correct her.
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He did not even blink.
My mother, Sonia, stood beside me with both hands wrapped around her purse strap so tightly the leather creaked.
“Cristina,” she whispered.
I gave her one small nod.
Inside the courtroom, the judge’s voice echoed off polished wood. Papers slid across the table. Damien signed first, fast and clean, like he was closing a business deal.
Ruth sat behind him, legs crossed, smiling at the back of my head.
When the pen reached me, I signed every page without shaking.
Damien frowned.
Maybe he wanted tears.
Maybe he wanted pleading.
Maybe he wanted one last scene he could describe later as proof that leaving me had been necessary.
He got silence.
At 10:42 a.m., the judge declared the marriage dissolved.
Damien stood too quickly.
His phone buzzed.
The screen lit up with a calendar alert:
Wedding ceremony — 3:00 p.m.
I saw it.
So did my mother.
Ruth hurried to his side.
Damien cleared his throat.
“We’ll talk later about the baby.”
“The baby?” I said.
Ruth touched his sleeve.
“Cristina, don’t make this harder.”
I opened the folder.
Just an inch.
Enough for Damien to see the top line of the bank report.
$84,600.
His face shifted.
Barely.
But Ruth saw it.
Outside, the rain had stopped. White flowers were tied to a black car waiting at the curb.
A wedding car.
On the same courthouse steps where he had just divorced his pregnant wife.
Ruth lifted her chin.
“Enjoy your new life, Cristina.”
I smiled.
Then I slid one sealed clinic envelope from the folder and tapped it once against my palm.
Damien’s eyes locked on it.
“What is that?”
I walked past him.
My mother opened the SUV door.
At 10:49 a.m., before I climbed in, I turned back.
“Enjoy the wedding.”
Ruth’s smile froze.
Damien took one step toward me.
And the courthouse security guard stepped between us, looking straight at the sealed medical record in my hand.
Should Cristina reveal the medical document before the wedding — or let them say “I do” first?