The cry of a newborn filled room 212 of the General Hospital of Guadalajara. Camila Herrera, just 24 years old, held her son in trembling arms. The exhaustion of a difficult fourteen-hour labor showed in her pale face.
“It’s beautiful, my love,” she whispered, stroking the baby’s pink cheek. “He looks so much like you, Ricardo.”
Ricardo Mendoza, a large 32-year-old, stood serious, with a strange expression in his dark eyes. His calloused hands were clenched into fists at his sides. Something troubled him deeply.
“Why did it take you so long?” he asked harshly. “All women give birth faster. My mother had five children and never complained as much as you do.”
Camila felt a chill. She knew that voice—it was the same one he used when he was about to explode.
At that moment, nurse Sofia Ramirez, a middle-aged woman, came in to check on the new mother’s vital signs.
“Mrs. Mendoza, your blood pressure is a little high. It’s normal after childbirth, but you need to rest,” she said professionally, noticing the tension in the air.Ricardo murmured, walking to the window:
“She always exaggerates everything. Surely she is playing the victim so that she is treated more.”
Sofia frowned. In her years of work, she had seen many kinds of husbands, but something about this man’s attitude made her uneasy.
Camila lowered her gaze, squeezing her baby tighter.
“Ricardo, please, I’m very tired.”
“Tired?” he sneered, turning sharply. “I work twelve hours in the sun to maintain this house, and you get tired from doing what all women do naturally.”
Little Leonardo began to cry harder, as if sensing the tension between his parents. Camila tried to calm him by rocking him gently, but her hands were shaking.Her story reminds us that no woman is ever truly alone, and courage can change lives. If you or someone you know is experiencing domestic violence, seek help. There is always a way out.