Part 3 – “THEY WERE HIDING MORE THAN JUST THE TRUTH”

The principal’s hands shook slightly as she placed the last screenshot on the desk. My pulse raced. Each image was like a knife twisting in my chest. There were messages, photos… and then—something I couldn’t believe.

“Your baby… was not the first,” the principal said quietly, glancing at Mrs. Rebeca.

I froze. My eyes darted to Mateo. His perfectly ironed shirt, his arrogant smirk… everything suddenly made sense. But it was worse than I imagined.

The principal continued, her voice steady but low:

“These screenshots were sent anonymously. They show your daughter… and two other girls. Your son’s behavior has been ongoing, hidden for months. The school didn’t know until someone finally spoke up.”

Mrs. Rebeca’s hand tightened on the edge of the table. Her nails left marks in the polished wood. She didn’t speak. She didn’t even blink. But I saw it in her eyes: panic.

Mateo’s head lowered, and for the first time, I saw fear. Not embarrassment. Fear.

“You… you can’t prove anything,” he muttered.

I swallowed hard. “Then why are you here?” I whispered to the principal.

The principal turned toward me, her eyes softening. “Because someone finally did. Someone brave enough to collect the evidence.”

That’s when a notification pinged on my phone. I had no idea who sent it. I opened it… and my stomach dropped.

A photo. A blurry image of Mateo, standing behind the gym, holding what looked like a folder. My backpack. And beside him, a younger girl, wide-eyed, clutching a notebook.

The text beneath it:

“He thinks he’s untouchable. But we know the truth.”

My hands trembled. This was not just about my pregnancy anymore. This was bigger. Much bigger.

Then, suddenly, the principal’s office door slammed open.

A student I didn’t recognize—one of the “quiet ones” from math class—rushed in. Her eyes darted around nervously.

“You have to see this,” she panted, holding a USB drive like it was the most precious thing in the world.

I took it, my fingers shaking. The principal inserted it into her computer. The screen filled with videos. Videos of Mateo and other students being led into the back storage room, whispered conversations, threats, moments of bullying… but worst of all, evidence of manipulation.

“He’s been recording… blackmailing them,” the principal explained. “And your baby… she may have been targeted first, but he wasn’t finished. This… this is just what we could find.”

I wanted to scream. To throw everything at him. But I knew it wasn’t just him. It was his mother. And possibly others—teachers, parents, people who looked normal but hid behind power.

Suddenly, my backpack vibrated. I froze. Inside, I had kept all my journals, notes, everything I could write down to prove my story. And now it was responding—almost like a warning.

Sophie, the girl who had handed me the bag weeks ago, appeared in the doorway. Her small hands shook as she whispered:

“Mom… they’re coming for it. For all of it.”

I felt panic rise in my chest. Mateo’s smirk earlier had turned into a calculated coldness. He had power. Connections. And now, the proof—the backpack, the USB, the screenshots—was everything he needed to silence me.

The principal stepped closer, whispering:

“You can’t trust anyone. Not even the school’s security. They’ve already tried to hide the first incident.”

I realized then that my life—and my daughter’s—was at stake. What had started as a battle for truth about a teenage pregnancy had escalated into something dangerous, something organized. And the worst part? I was only beginning to see the tip of the iceberg.

Then, a knock at the office window. Slow. Deliberate. Heavy.

We froze.

Mateo’s face appeared on the other side of the glass. Not angry. Not ashamed. Calm. Smiling in a way that made my blood run cold.

“I hope you enjoy what you’ve found,” he mouthed.

I gripped my backpack tightly. Sophie grabbed my hand. My pulse was deafening. And for the first time in my life, I understood: this was no longer just about me, my pregnancy, or even Mateo’s lies. This was survival.

And somewhere, in the shadows of the school, the real story was just beginning.