Diego did not misunderstand.
He invented the entire accusation.
“Do you have records?” you ask.
“Yes.”
“Will you testify?”
There is silence.
Then Angela says, “I have a sister whose husband did something similar. Not like this, but… enough. I’ll testify.”
You call Marisol immediately.
When you tell her, she does not celebrate.
She says only, “Now we end him carefully.”
The records change everything.
Diego’s attorney tries to suppress them.
Fails.
Tries to argue privacy.
Fails.
Tries to claim Diego misunderstood the appointment.
Fails when Angela provides clinic notes showing he canceled and later requested false documentation.
Then comes the next blow.
Bank records show Diego rented an apartment for Paola one month before your positive pregnancy test.
One month before.
He was already preparing to leave.
Then another record appears.
A jewelry store charge.
$6,800.
Not for you.
For Paola.
Dated three days after he accused you of cheating.
Then credit card statements reveal he used marital funds to pay Paola’s medical bills.
Including prenatal labs.
Your hands shake when Marisol shows you.
“How far along is she?”
Marisol’s mouth tightens.
“Based on what we have? About eighteen weeks.”
You do the math.
Paola was already pregnant when Diego accused you.
Not newly.
Not after he left.
Already.
Your pregnancy did not make him leave.
It threatened his plan.
Because if your baby was clearly his, he could not play the betrayed husband. He could not make you sign away the house cheaply. He could not move Paola in as the innocent woman who rescued him from a cheating wife.
So he created the vasectomy lie.
Paola’s pregnancy was the real timeline he needed hidden.
When this comes out in mediation, everything collapses.
Diego sits across the conference table, pale and furious. Paola is not allowed in the room. His attorney looks like he would rather be anywhere else.
Marisol places the clinic records on the table.
Then the apartment lease.
Then Paola’s medical bills.
Then the jewelry receipt.
Then Diego’s texts.
One by one.