Daniel spoke in a clear voice, without trembling. He said he knew the truth and held no grudge.
He thanked Isabella for giving him life, but explained that a life cannot sustain itself. He recounted how he had seen me arrive home exhausted from the hospital and still sit down to study with him. He remembered the nights with fevers, the afternoons of extra work, the simple birthdays filled with laughter. He didn’t talk about money; he talked about presence.
Isabella tried to maintain her composure, but her face hardened when Daniel explained that, for months before the trial, she had tried to get closer to him by offering expensive gifts, trips, and promises of admission to private universities. Daniel confessed that he felt uncomfortable, not bought, but pressured. The judge took note. Isabella’s lawyer objected, but the judge allowed the proceedings to continue.
Daniel concluded by saying that he didn’t want to be a trophy or a belated reparation. That he respected Isabella, but that his home was with me.
“Motherhood isn’t delegated and then claimed later,” he said. “It’s practiced every day.”
There were murmurs, some muffled applause. I wept silently.
The ruling was reserved. Days later, the decision arrived: custody remained with me until Daniel reached the age of majority, and a gradual and respectful visitation schedule was established with Isabella, contingent upon the child’s well-being.
Isabella publicly accepted the decision. Privately, she asked to speak with me. We met without lawyers. She confessed that abandoning him had been her biggest mistake and that money hadn’t filled that void. We agreed on something simple yet difficult: to put Daniel first.
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