Vanessa didn’t want a stepdaughter. She wanted the money—the accounts, the mansion, the cars. Maya was merely an obstacle standing between Vanessa and the life she believed she was entitled to.
So Vanessa transformed Maya’s childhood into something deliberately cruel.
Breakfast, lunch, dinner—Maya ate alone.
School—the driver dropped her off and picked her up.
Vanessa never attended a single parent-teacher conference.
When the school finally called to ask why Maya’s grades were falling, Vanessa answered coldly, “She’s lazy. Always has been,” and hung up.
The reality was, Maya could barely concentrate.
Her back hurt so badly she couldn’t sit upright. In class, she leaned to one side in her chair. Other children laughed. She pressed her lips together so she wouldn’t cry.
It had begun eight months earlier.
It was a Saturday. Daniel, her father, was in São Paulo finalizing a deal. Maya was on the living room floor, finishing a jigsaw puzzle. She was proud—she had completed all her homework on her own.
“Vanessa, look,” she said, holding up her notebook. “I finished everything.”
Vanessa didn’t lift her eyes from her phone. “Great. Now go away.”
“But the teacher said—”
“I said go away!” Vanessa snapped, standing up. “Do you not understand Portuguese?”
“I’m sorry, I just—”
“Get out of my sight!”
Vanessa shoved her—hard.Teresa knew she had no time.
She called Dr. Helena Costa, a lawyer who had once helped her.
“We need undeniable evidence,” Helena said. “Record everything.”
And so Teresa began to record.