“Maybe if your wife were gone, she wouldn’t keep you away from your real family.”My mother said that right in front of a doctor, while my seven-day-old son burned with fever in my arms.My name is Miguel Torres. I live in Mexico City and work as a warehouse manager. My wife, Valeria, has always been gentle—someone who apologizes even when she’s not wrong, someone who rarely raises her voice even when she’s hurt.A week before, she gave birth to our son, Santiago.I still remember her in the hospital—exhausted, pale, barely able to move, yet smiling as if she had been given the entire world.“Promise me no one will hurt him,” she whispered.I promised.I had no idea how wrong I would be.A few days later, I was sent out of town for work. I didn’t want to leave. Valeria was weak, in pain, and the baby needed constant care. But my mother and sister insisted they would help.
“Go without worry,” my mother said. “We’ll take care of everything.”So I left—trusting them.For four days, I called constantly. My mother always answered. Valeria only appeared briefly on video calls, looking weaker each time.“She just gave birth,” my mother said. “Stop worrying.”I wanted to believe her.But something didn’t feel right.On the fourth day, I returned early without telling anyone.The apartment door was slightly open. Inside, the air was freezing. My mother and sister were asleep under blankets, surrounded by leftover food and trash.There was no sign of care—no warm food, no clean clothes, nothing prepared for a newborn.