Rapidfeed
Feb 05, 2026

The millionaire's twins cried day and night without consolation

Money could buy everything: the most exclusive marble mansion in the city, a fleet of sports cars, a textile company with international reach, and the respect of high society. But Sebastián Delgado, the man who had it all, would give every last penny of his fortune for the one thing that eluded him: a peaceful night.

 

 

It was three in the morning, and the cries of Mateo and Santiago, his six-month-old twins, echoed against the empty walls of the house like a siren of endless pain. It wasn't a cry of hunger, nor of physical discomfort. It was a visceral scream, the sound of two small souls desperately seeking the warmth of a mother who was no longer there.

 

Valeria had died four months earlier in a car accident. In a second, Sebastián went from being the happiest man in the world to a widower with two babies he didn't know how to comfort. Since then, the Delgado mansion had become a parade of "expert" nannies. Registered nurses, child development specialists, and midwives with decades of experience had all come and gone. They had all failed.

"Mr. Delgado, the children need therapy. This isn't normal," the last one had told him, resigning after only three days.

Sebastián paced the hallway, his eyes bloodshot, awkwardly rocking Mateo while Santiago screamed from his crib. He felt like a failure. He could negotiate million-dollar contracts with industry sharks, but he couldn't calm his own children.

 

 

"Please, children, Daddy's here… please," he whispered, his voice breaking with helplessness.

 

He stopped in front of the window overlooking the garden. The rain pounded against the glass, reflecting his own inner turmoil. He was at his breaking point. His partners demanded results, his family in Spain begged him to send the children to live with them, but he refused to be separated from the only thing he had left of Valeria. However, that night, exhaustion seeping into his bones, Sebastián felt like he was breaking. He collapsed to his knees beside the crib, the tears of a grown man mingling with his children's cries.

Valeria had died four months earlier in a car accident. In a second, Sebastián went from being the happiest man in the world to a widower with two babies he didn't know how to comfort. Since then, the Delgado mansion had become a parade of "expert" nannies. Registered nurses, child development specialists, and midwives with decades of experience had all come and gone. They had all failed.

"Mr. Delgado, the children need therapy. This isn't normal," the last one had told him, resigning after only three days.

Sebastián paced the hallway, his eyes bloodshot, awkwardly rocking Mateo while Santiago screamed from his crib. He felt like a failure. He could negotiate million-dollar contracts with industry sharks, but he couldn't calm his own children.

 

 

"Please, children, Daddy's here… please," he whispered, his voice breaking with helplessness.

 

He stopped in front of the window overlooking the garden. The rain pounded against the glass, reflecting his own inner turmoil. He was at his breaking point. His partners demanded results, his family in Spain begged him to send the children to live with them, but he refused to be separated from the only thing he had left of Valeria. However, that night, exhaustion seeping into his bones, Sebastián felt like he was breaking. He collapsed to his knees beside the crib, the tears of a grown man mingling with his children's cries.

 

 

It was then, at the lowest point of his despair, that the doorbell of the mansion rang.

Sebastián froze. Who would call at 3:30 in the morning in the middle of a storm? He glanced at the security monitor. In the doorway, soaked and carrying an old, worn suitcase, stood a young woman. She didn't look like a nurse, or an expert. She looked lost. But in her eyes, even through the pixelated screen, there was a determination that chilled him to the bone. Sebastián didn't know it yet, but that solitary figure in the rain wasn't just carrying a suitcase; she was carrying the twist of fate that was about to shake the foundations of his life forever.

 

 

Sebastián went downstairs with Mateo in his arms, driven more by curiosity than by prudence. As she opened the door, the cold wind swept through the lobby, but the young woman didn't flinch.

 

"Good evening, sir. Or good morning," she said. She had a soft, rural accent, musical and humble. "My name is Esperanza. Esperanza Morales. I'm here for the children."

Sebastián blinked, confused. "I don't have an appointment scheduled. Who sent you?"

 

"No one, sir. Or well, my cousin Luz works at the agency downtown. She told me you were desperate, that your babies are crying because they miss their mother." Esperanza set her suitcase on the floor and looked at Mateo, who, surprisingly, had quieted down at the sound of her voice. "I took the last bus from my town. I know I don't have an appointment, but babies don't understand office hours, do they?"

There was such an undeniable truth in her words that Sebastián was left speechless. Before he could reply, Santiago started shouting again from upstairs. Without asking permission, Esperanza took off her wet coat.

 

 

“May I?” she asked, extending her arms toward Mateo.

Sebastián, a man who checked every reference three times before hiring a janitor, did something irrational: he handed his son over to a complete stranger.

 

What happened next was the closest thing to magic Sebastián had ever witnessed. Esperanza didn't use modern techniques or early stimulation toys. She simply settled the baby against her chest, began to rock with a hypnotic rhythm, and hummed an old melody, a lullaby that spoke of cornfields and silver moons.

Mateo stopped crying in seconds. His swollen, red eyes closed.

“Anxiety is contagious, sir,” she whispered, going upstairs to where the other twin was crying. “But so is calmness.”

 

That night, for the first time in four months, the Delgado mansion slept.

Sebastian woke up five hours later, startled by the silence. He ran to the children's room, fearing the worst, but what he found took his breath away. The curtains were ajar ande

 

Night fell heavily on the Santa Rita plantation in the Paraíba Valley in 1852. The hot March air carried the scent of damp earth, mingled with the sweet perfume of the coffee plantations that stretched as far as the eye could see. In the senzala, the slave quarters, barely illuminated by weak lamps that flickered on the adobe walls, Joana's moans of pain echoed like a lament.

She lay on a straw mattress, her body covered in sweat, clutching the arms of Aunt Benedita, the oldest midwife on the plantation. The labor had already lasted for hours. Joana was only 19 years old, but her face already bore the marks of a life of suffering.

 

 

Beside her, other enslaved women whispered prayers in African languages, swaying gently as the scent of medicinal herbs mingled with the pungent smell of weary bodies. Suddenly, a high-pitched, shrill cry broke the silence.

Aunt Benedita lifted a small baby into her arms. She quickly cleaned it with a damp cloth, and that's when her eyes widened in horror. She froze. The other enslaved women approached, and when they saw the child, a deathly silence fell over the place.

 

 

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The baby had fair, almost pink skin and hair that shone like threads of pure gold.

 

Joana, exhausted, stretched out her arms. “My son, give me my son,” she murmured. Aunt Benedita, after hesitating, handed him over. When Joana saw that golden hair and those clear eyes beginning to open, her heart filled with a profound love, but also with a paralyzing fear. She knew exactly what it meant. She knew her secret could no longer be hidden.

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