Mag-log inKumba
The ultrasound image wouldn’t leave my mind, it was all I could see.
No matter how hard I tried to focus on anything else, that grainy black and white picture kept flashing behind my eyes.
I shoved the thought away and walked straight through the hospital corridor, ignoring the curious glances from nurses who recognized me.
I pushed open the door to Dr. Valentina’s office without knocking.
She looked up immediately.
“Kumba, what's going on?”
I cut her off.
“I will pay her bills.”
“What?”
“Every single one,” I said flatly. “The surgery, her room, the medication everything. Whatever tests she needs. Iwant that girl well taken care off until she is better to be discharged."
Valentina studied me carefully before finally saying anything.
“That’s generous of you Kumba.”
“It’s damage control.” I cut her off
My voice echoed sharply in the room.
“She was hit by a car, she is homeless, and somehow this hospital managed to implant my child in her by accident. The least we can do is treat her and not have her worry about how she will pay for the treatment.”
Valentina leaned back slightly.
“And the pregnancy?”
I ran a hand through my hair, Just hearing the word made my chest tighten again.
“Do whatever she decides,” I said finally.
Her eyebrows lifted.
“What? You are leaving the decision to her?”
“Yes.”
I grabbed my jacket from the chair.
“If she wants to terminate it, fine.”
If she doesn’t, I pushed the thought away immediately.
“I am not involved,” I finished coldly.
Valentina’s gaze sharpened.
“Kumba, that child is yours still.”
I stopped at the door but didn’t turn around.
“Legally maybe,” I said and then I walked out.
The drive home was a blur of red lights and rage.
By the time I pulled into the long driveway of the Morenti estate, my hands were gripping the steering wheel so tightly my knuckles had gone white.
The house stood exactly the way it always had, perfect, cold, controlled, Just like my mother.
I slammed the car door and walked inside without waiting for the staff to greet me.
“Where is she?” I asked one of the housekeepers.
“In the sitting room, sir.”
Of course she was, my mother loved that room.
It was where she entertained people she wanted to manipulate and plot on how to ruin their lives.
I walked straight there and pushed the door open.
My mother, Diane Morenti, sat elegantly on the cream sofa with a cup of tea in her hand like she didn’t have a single sin on her conscience.
She looked up calmly.
“Kumba,” she said smoothly. “You look upset, what's wrong baby?”
I hated when she did that, called me baby like I was still a little boy.
That calm tone snapped the last thread holding my temper together.
“Did you steal my genetic sample?” I demanded.
Her expression barely changed.
“How dramatic?”
“Answer the question mom”
She set her teacup down slowly.
“I wouldn’t call it stealing really.”
“Then what would you call bribing hospital staff to obtain my specimen without my consent?” I snapped.
Her lips pressed together briefly.
“Ensuring the future of this family is secure.”
I laughed harshly.
“You arranged artificial insemination behind my back mother, you were going to make me a father without my consent.”
“You were sick,” she said sharply. “You were fighting cancer and talking about destroying your samples like a fool. I wasn’t about to let the Morenti bloodline disappear because you were being emotional.”
“I destroyed them for a reason mother.”
“Yes,” she said dismissively. “Because you were afraid your kids might have the cancer gene”
My fists clenched.
“You arranged for Moraa to be inseminated? ”
“Of course I did, she is about to be your wife, a child won't hurt”
“And it failed,” I said coldly.
She blinked once.
“What?”
“Moraa is not pregnant,” I continued, "I guess she hasn't told you the bad news huh?"
Her calm mask cracked slightly.
“That’s impossible, it was supposed to be a success”
“Well it wasn't mother and your dream of becoming a grandmother ends there.”
Her fingers tightened on the armrest.
“Are you certain?”
“Yes.”
Her expression hardened.
“Well then the hospital is incompetent.”
“That’s not the point,” I said furiously, “You had no right to interfere in my life like that.”
“Kumba”
“I will never be a father,” I cut in sharply, "I don't want to be a father, I don't want my child or children to go through what I have gone through. And no amount of meddling will ever change my mind."
The words echoed in the room.
Her eyes flashed with anger.
“That is not your decision alone.”
“It absolutely is.”
She stood slowly.
“You are the only heir to this family, our bloodline will die with you, don't you understand that?”
“And that doesn’t give you the right to control my life mother, I don't care about any of that.”
Her voice went icy.
“You are being irrational.”
“No,” I said quietly.
“I am done with you trying to meddle in my life, and the wedding is off. Be sure to tell Moraa since she listens to you now instead of her actual fiancee.”
Her eyes widened slightly.
“You cannot be serious.”
“I am.”
“Moraa has done nothing wrong.”
“Then tell her I am sorry she is not pregnant,” I said coldly, “But the wedding is not happening.”
“You will humiliate this family if you cancel that wedding Kumba.”
I shrugged.
“You should have thought about that before trying to engineer my child in a laboratory.”
Her face went pale with fury.
I turned and walked out of the room.
By the time I got back to my penthouse, the anger had turned into something heavier, Something darker. The image of Gesare was still haunting me, something about her eyes.
I poured myself a drink the second I walked in.
Then another.
The city lights stretched across the windows like a glittering sea.
Usually the view calmed me down, but not tonight.
I dropped onto the couch and stared at my phone. My mind kept drifting back to the hospital room.
Gesare’s laugh.
Her stupid joke about being the next Mary.
Her bright smile when she showed me the ultrasound, She didn’t know who I was or that my mother and fiancee had changed the course of her life.
I took another long drink.
“Not my problem,” I muttered to the empty apartment.
My phone buzzed on the table and I ignored it but it buzzed again.
Dr. Valentina.
A bad feeling twisted in my stomach immediately and I opened the text.
She signed herself out of the hospital, Gesare left an hour ago. We tried to stop her but she insisted and since all her bills were cleared we had no ground to hold her and I have no idea where she is, she never called the shelter I told her to.
“You have got to be kidding me,” I muttered.
A homeless woman with a broken leg and pregnant with my child was now somewhere out roaming the city.
I grabbed my jacket and my keys.
The whiskey haze vanished instantly.
Because for the first time since this nightmare started, I felt something that looked a lot like panic.
I was worried about her, I wanted to protect her from the world.
Kumba. For a moment after she finishes talking, I don’t move, I just sit there, leaning back against the headboard, watching her.Because everything she said lines up but also I don't really know what to say to her, not after everything I accused her of last night. I run a hand over my face, exhaling slowly, my thoughts still tangled up, still refusing to settle into anything solid.l, I know I should say something or say something but before I can form the exact words a loud knock echoes through the room.It's sharp, urgent and aggressive it makes Gesare flinches slightly and I notice that.We both turn toward the door instinctively as another knock follows, harder this time.“What now?” I mutter under my breath, irritation already creeping in.Gesare stands up, hesitating for a second before walking towards the door.“I didn’t order anything else,” she says, more to herself than to me.There is another voice now, Muffled and it sound like she is arguing.“I said you can’t just”Th
Kumba.The coffee helps, but not enough to kill the headache completely, my head feels is heavy and all I want to rely do is lie back down, but I can't. I sit there for a while after she corrects me, just watching her. I watch her quietly, studying her in a way I haven’t allowed myself to before. She looks more composed and put together this morning, but there is something underneath that, like she is holding herself together by sheer will.I set my cup down slowly and carefully because I need to do this right, last night I was under the influence of alcohol, I was confused and angry and all I did was accuse her of a bunch of things, today I just wanted to take to her calmly, maybe that will get me the information I needed. I shift slightly, turning towards her and she doesn’t move or look at me at all, she was still keeping her distance. “You can come sit down, I am pretty sure you are tired,” I say quietly, she hesitates for just for a second before she walks towards me and sit
Gesare.I didn't sleep at all, I mean how could I even get any sleep with a billionaire passed out on my cheap hotel bed. Maybe for a few minutes here and there I did close my eyes, but nothing that counts.The entire night sits heavy in my chest, replaying over and over again like something my mind refuses to let go of. Every word he said. Every accusation he made before when he came here. But the question that echoed in my mind was him questioning everything I told him about myself, how could he think someone can lie about stuff like that. I close my eyes briefly, pressing my lips together as I sit on the edge of the chair across from the bed, it was the only other furniture in the hotel room.Kumba is still lying on the bed, in the same exact spot where he passed out last night. Half on his side, one arm thrown across the mattress, breathing slow and deep like none of it ever happened.My gaze lingers on him longer than I want it to, taking in the view of his perfect manly body
Diane. The hospital corridor feels too bright.I sit there, but I don’t feel like I’m sitting. My body is still, but everything inside me is pacing, spiraling, refusing to settle.The smell of antiseptic clings to the air, sharp and cold, and every now and then a nurse passes by, their footsteps echoing in a way that makes the silence feel even heavier.Beside me is my sonKumba, he is restless.He hasn’t sat down properly since we got here. Even now, he is half standing and half leaning against the wall, his hands running through his hair over and over again like he’s trying to undo something that’s already been done and I watch him for a moment. Then the frustration rises again.“You left her alone,” I say, my voice low but sharp enough to cut through the silence.He stills slightly.“Mom”“You left her Kumba ,” I repeat, louder this time, the words fueled by fear more than anger, but they come out harsh anyway. “Alone in your house in her condition.”His jaw tightens.“I told you I
Diane.Something isn’t right, I can feel it I just can't explain it.It starts as a small discomfort, the kind you try to ignore because you don’t want to sound dramatic, even to yourself. But as the minutes stretch into hours, that feeling doesn’t fade, It grows.By mid morning, I am pacing around my living room, my phone clutched tightly in my hand.Gesare should have been back by now.She told me she was spending the night at Kumba’s house. I didn’t question it, I knew she was fine but today morning I realized she had forgotten her phone here, and my son has been sending me straight to voice mail all morning. Kumba's son was a few houses down from mine but I also don't want to pop up on them Unnannounced but Kumba knew she was supposed to take her vitamins at exactly ten am and yet he had not brought her back. “She wouldn’t forget herself, she knows she is not supposed to miss even a day,” I murmur to myself, shaking my head. “Not her.”I try calling my son Kumba again and lucki
Gesare."I am really tired, I should get some rest it has been a really long day." I finally say getting up from the dining table, and that's when Kumba finally looks up at me. "Okay you get some rest." Diane says and I walk away, the hallway feels longer on the way back, or maybe it’s just me.Every step echoes softly against the polished floors, the sound too loud in the quiet of the house. Dinner still lingers in my mind, the polite conversation, the careful words, the way Diane looked at me like she was trying to rewrite her opinion in real time.I reach my door and pause for a second, my hand resting on the handle. For a brief moment, I consider going back downstairs. Sitting in the living room and doing something normal, but nothing about this feels normal and I know Kumba is still around so he needs spaces with his mom. So instead, I push the door open and step inside, closing it gently behind me.The room greets me with the same stillness I left it in still perfect and untou
Dr. Valentina. I have handled difficult patients before, emotional ones, angry ones, desperate ones, it all comes with the job, but this?This is different.Because the moment Moraa asks that question“What really happened the day of my insemination, Dr. Valentina?” something inside me stills but n
Gesare. The first thing I noticed when I woke up was how quiet it was apart from the machines humming and the soft murmurs of the nurses talking at the station down the corridor.The second thing I noticed was the pain.It throbbed through my leg like a slow drumbeat, dull but heavy, reminding me
Moraa. The message comes at the worst possible time or maybe the perfect one depending on how you look at it. I’m lying on the couch, staring at the ceiling, my mind replaying the morning over and over again, Kumba’s voice, his touch, the way he held me like he meant it and yet somehow didn’t, It
Kumba. The moment I read the message, something in me snapped, I didn’t even remember grabbing my keys.One second I was staring at my phone, the words “She signed herself out” burning into my skull, and the next I was already halfway out the door, jacket thrown over my shoulder, the faint burn of







