The most important day of my life did not begin with joy or relief, but with a scream that tore through the sterile calm of a public hospital in Seville. My name is María Fernández, and thirty years ago I gave birth to five babies after a labor so long and painful that time seemed to dissolve into a blur of contractions, sweat, and whispered prayers. When it was finally over, when the last cry echoed and the nurses moved with hurried efficiency, I drifted in and out of consciousness. When I woke fully, the first thing I saw was five small cribs arranged in a neat line beside my bed.
Five tiny faces. Five fragile lives. My heart swelled with a love so fierce it frightened me. And then I noticed what everyone else in the room had already seen but no one had dared to say out loud: every one of my babies was Black. Before my mind could even begin to form questions, before I could hold onto that overwhelming love long enough to anchor myself, my husband Javier Morales walked into the room. He approached the cribs slowly, one by one, his expression tightening with each step.