Clara stood up, too. She didn’t get too close. As if she understood that my pain needed space so it wouldn’t bite. “That’s why I came,” she said. “Because Mark wasn’t running away. He was building a trap.”
I slumped into the chair. Matthew made a small sound in his crib. He moved his little hands, opened his mouth, and went back to sleep. So peaceful. So innocent. So oblivious to the filth his father had built around his birth
She pulled out a final sheet. It was a family health insurance policy. Clara’s name. Her two children. Mark’s name. And a new, incomplete application, where my son appeared. Not by name. Just as “unrecognized minor.”
“What is this?” “Mark wanted to add Matthew to the insurance without legally recognizing him.” “Why would he do that?”
Clara swallowed hard. “Because his company has a trust fund for children with disabilities. Medical support, therapies, deductions, tax benefits. Mark wanted to claim it through an account he controlled.”
I didn’t understand at first. Then I did. And I almost threw up. “He wanted to use my son.” “Yes.” “Without seeing him. Without holding him. Without giving him his last name.”
Clara closed her eyes. “Yes.”
I got up and ran to the bathroom. I threw up bile. Clara held my hair back. And that scene, absurd and terrible, changed everything. Mark’s wife was kneeling next to me, taking care of me, while the man who had lied to both of us tried to profit off my baby.
When I could breathe again, I washed my face. I looked at myself in the mirror. Dark circles under my eyes. Hair tied up messily. Milk-stained shirt. But there was something different in my eyes. It wasn’t just sadness anymore. It was war.
“What do we do?” I asked. Clara wiped her tears with her sleeve. “We sink him.”