The most important day of my life began not with joy, but with overwhelming pain and disorientation. In a public hospital in Seville, after an exhausting labor, I gave birth to five babies. When I finally awoke fully, five cribs stood beside my bed in a perfect line. Love rushed through me with terrifying force—until reality intruded. Every one of my children was Black. Before I could ask questions or gather myself, silence filled the room.
When my husband, Javier, arrived, his confusion hardened almost instantly into rage. He accused me loudly, refusing explanations from nurses and rejecting reason before it could surface. Without asking for tests or answers, he declared his shame and walked away. In a single moment, I became both a mother of five and a woman abandoned, left to face disbelief alone.
The days that followed were marked by isolation. I navigated paperwork, decisions, and newborn care without support. Whispers followed me through hospital corridors. I named my children Daniel, Samuel, Lucía, Andrés, and Raquel, choosing names rooted in strength. That first night home, surrounded by five sleeping infants, I made a vow to protect them and one day uncover the truth.