The moment the little girl whispered, “You’re the reason Daddy cries at night,” something inside me broke.
I stared into Marcella’s wide, unblinking eyes—his eyes—and suddenly everything felt too loud. The clatter of spoons. The hum of café music. The soft scrape of his wife’s chair as she leaned forward without blinking.
Dalia didn’t slap me. She didn’t shout. She simply watched me with that still, eerie calm—the kind of stillness that made my skin itch with dread.
“I don’t want to hurt you,” I said too quickly. “He told me you were unhappy. That you were only together for the kids.”
Dalia let out a soft laugh that didn’t reach her eyes.
<blockquote>“He’s been saying that to every woman he’s cheated on me with. Since before Marcella was born.”</blockquote>
Her voice was cool. Controlled. The kind of voice that had already cried, broken, healed—and decided to burn clean through the lies.
I felt dizzy.
Eight months ago, I met him at a wine bar downtown. He was charming. Attentive. He made me feel visible in a way I hadn’t in years. He told me he was in a loveless marriage. Said I was his light. Whispered promises in my sheets. He even helped me pick baby names.
Now I was pregnant. And completely, devastatingly alone.
Dalia dismissed her children gently, her voice soft but firm. Once they were outside, her demeanor shifted.
<blockquote>“I’m not here to fight,” she said. “I’m here because I don’t want my kids to grow up hating their father. Or you.”</blockquote>
Her words stunned me more than any slap ever could. Then she pulled out a folded note.
<blockquote>“This is the name of the counselor I used when I found out about his first affair. You’ll need her more than I do.”</blockquote>
I hesitated. My fingers trembled as I took it. “Why are you helping me?”