Skip to content

Deliced Cook

DC

The silence in the principal’s office was no longer heavy; it was suffocating. It was the kind of silence that precedes a landslide—quiet, yet vibrating with the force of the destruction about to follow.

EditoronMay 19, 2026Leave a Comment on The silence in the principal’s office was no longer heavy; it was suffocating. It was the kind of silence that precedes a landslide—quiet, yet vibrating with the force of the destruction about to follow.

vision: “Your baby was not the first.”

My breath came in ragged hitches. I looked up and saw Aunt Patricia standing in the doorway. I hadn’t even noticed when she slipped into the room. She was leaning against the doorframe, her face a mask of practiced concern, but her eyes were fixed on the USB drive as if she could set it on fire with her gaze.

“Patricia?” my mother whispered, her voice cracking. “What is this? What does this mean?”

My aunt didn’t look at my mother. She looked at Mrs. Rebeca Rivas. A silent, terrifying communication passed between them—a look of failed conspirators.

“It means,” the principal said, her voice regaining its steel as she looked at the printed sheets in the folder, “that this was never just about a teenage pregnancy. It was about a predatory cover-up.”
The Unveiling of the Pact

The principal turned the laptop screen toward the room. The video continued. We saw Aunt Patricia take a thick white envelope from Mrs. Rebeca—not the yellow one my father had rejected, but another.

“Valeria’s parents are stubborn,” Patricia’s recorded voice hissed on the speakers. “But she’s just a child. She drinks what I give her. She trusts me. By the end of the month, there won’t be a ‘problem’ for Mateo to worry about.”

My father let out a sound that wasn’t human—a low, guttural growl of pure agony. He lunged toward Patricia, but the school counselor and the security guard, who had been waiting outside, stepped in.

“Don’t touch her, Mr. Gomez,” the principal warned. “The police are already on their way. We called them ten minutes ago.”

Mrs. Rebeca Rivas finally lost her composure. The designer bag slipped from her shoulder, hitting the floor with a dull thud. “This is a setup! That video is doctored! My son is a minor, you can’t use this!”

“Actually,” the principal replied calmly, “your son is eighteen. He stayed back a year, remember? And since he is an adult, and this video suggests a conspiracy to commit a crime against a minor—Valeria—the law is very clear.”

Mateo looked like he was about to vomit. The “Golden Boy” of the soccer team was gone. In his place was a terrified boy whose privilege had finally hit a wall it couldn’t climb over.
The Mystery Messenger

“Who sent the message, Valeria?” my mother asked, her voice trembling as she grabbed my phone.

I couldn’t speak. I just pointed to the screen. My mother read the text aloud: “Your baby was not the first.”

The room went still again. Aunt Patricia’s face turned from pale to a sickly grey.

Suddenly, the door to the office opened again. A girl walked in. She was a senior, someone I barely knew—Lucia, the quiet girl who sat in the back of the library. She was holding a stack of old journals.

“I recorded it,” Lucia said, her voice steady despite the tears in her eyes. “I’ve been following Mrs. Rivas for two years.”

She walked over to me and took my hand. Her palms were sweating, but her grip was like iron.

“Two years ago, it was my sister,” Lucia said, looking directly at Mateo. “She was fifteen, just like Valeria. She was pregnant with Mateo’s baby. Your mother didn’t offer us money, Mrs. Rivas. She sent Patricia to ‘counsel’ us. She gave my sister those same ‘calming teas.’ My sister lost the baby… and then she lost her mind. She’s in a facility now. She doesn’t even remember my name.”

The pieces of the puzzle clicked into place with a terrifying snap. Aunt Patricia wasn’t just my mother’s sister; she was a fixer. She used her position of trust in the community to “clean up” the messes made by the wealthy families in town.
The Breaking Point

Next »
Pages: 1 2 3 4
CategoriesUncategorized

Post navigation

Uncategorized

At 3:00 AM my husband’s mistress sent me a photo to destroy me, but I forwarded it to the whole Board of Directors of his company

At exactly 3:07 a.m., my phone vibrated across the marble nightstand. Not loud enough to wake the entire mansion in…

Uncategorized

**“The Humiliated Father-in-Law Who Secretly Saved the Family”**

The rain had been falling since dawn, tapping softly against the windows of the small apartment where Amina lived with…

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • I married a wealthy old man to save my family… but on our wedding night, he didn’t touch me. He simply sat in the darkness and said: “Sleep. I want to watch.” The way he said it made my skin crawl… and by morning I realized this marriage had never been about money. part1
    part1 of 2   I married a rich man to save my family, but on our wedding night, I didn’t get what was coming to me. He simply sat in the darkness and said: “Go to sleep. I want to watch.” The way he said it made my hair stand on end… and the next…
  • “For 4 Years, My Parents Told Neighbors, Teachers, And Even Our Pastor That I Was In Prison. “She Made Terrible Choices,” Mom Would Say With A Sigh. I Was Actually Overseas On A Military Deployment. When I Came Home In Uniform, The Mailman — Who’d Been Forwarding My Letters — Called The Local News. The Whole Town Showed Up. My Parents Locked Their…”
    “Don’t get out of the truck,” Mr. Holloway said, locking the doors with trembling hands. “Your mother just called 911 and told them an escaped inmate is standing on her lawn.” I stared through the windshield at the house I had dreamed about for four years. White porch. Green shutters. The same cracked driveway where…
  • A Single Dad Mechanic Returned a Lost Wallet Holding an Elderly Man’s Life Savings. What Happened the Next Morning Changed His Family Forever
    The grease under my fingernails never really washes off, and the weight of raising triplets alone is a constant, crushing pressure. My life is a cycle of overdue notices and broken appliances, a quiet war against poverty that I was slowly losing. When I found that thick, heavy wallet hidden under a lift at the…
  • PART 2: My husband gave me money every week to pay the cleaning lady
    The word paperwork echoed in my ears like a sudden explosion, shattering the fragile reality I had constructed over the last three months My knees buckled slightly, and I had to lean against the cold hallway wall to keep from collapsing onto the freshly mopped floor. The scent of lavender bleach, which usually brought me…
  • He Returned From His Secret Wedding to a Mansion He No Longer Owned My husband married another woman using my money,
    That bothered me less than it should have, because by then silence had become part of our marriage too. Mauricio had grown distant over the previous year in ways that were subtle enough to explain and sharp enough to wound. He was distracted at dinner. Protective of his phone. More interested in appearances than intimacy.…

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

Archives

  • May 2026
  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • July 2025

Categories

  • Main Dish
  • Uncategorized
Proudly powered by WordPress | Theme: Justread by GretaThemes.