In a sleepy farming village nestled deep in the mountains, two brothers, Tomas and Elmer, lived in a crumbling nipa hut with their ailing mother. Work was scarce, rice was rationed, and money was a luxury they hadn’t tasted in years.

Then came the offer.

Mila, the only daughter of a prosperous landlord, needed a husband — or rather, a legal arrangement. Her father had died suddenly, leaving behind a clause in his will: Mila could inherit the estate only if she were married within 30 days.

Desperate for a way out of poverty, the brothers made a deal with Mila.

She would marry both.

On paper, it would be Tomas. But at night, they would share her — a secret arrangement born out of desperation and silence.


Wedding Night

The rice wine was still warm on their lips when Tomas entered the bedroom.

Elmer sat outside, fists clenched.

He stared at the door, hearing the rustle of fabric, the creak of the bamboo bed, and the low murmurs of two people pretending it was love.

An hour passed. Then the door opened.

Tomas stepped out, eyes shadowed.

“She’s waiting,” he said flatly.

Elmer swallowed. “How was she?”

Tomas didn’t answer. He just lit a cigarette and walked off into the dark.

Elmer entered.


The Shocking Turn

Mila was sitting at the edge of the bed, hair loose, eyes cold.

“So,” she said. “The younger one.”

Elmer tried to smile. “This is… strange for me.”

“Strange for me too,” she replied, pulling the blanket tighter around her. “But you wanted this, didn’t you?”

He stepped closer. “We needed this, Mila. You too.”

Suddenly, she stood. Her voice sharpened.

“Before you touch me, Elmer… you should know something.”

He paused. The air shifted.

“Tomas already knew. That’s why he didn’t say anything.”

“Knew what?”

Mila walked to a drawer and pulled out an envelope. She tossed it at his chest.

“Because I’m pregnant. And it’s not either of yours.”

Elmer froze.

“W-What?”

“It’s from someone else. Before all of this. Before your desperation became my prison.”


The Breakdown

Elmer’s voice broke. “You used us?”

Mila laughed bitterly. “I saved all of us. I got the land. You got money. Tomas got a taste. But you… you were always the fool.”

“You lied to us!”

“Did I? Or did you lie to yourselves — thinking a woman would willingly become a prize between brothers?”

He staggered back, fury rising.

“Does Tomas know the baby isn’t his?”

“He does now. I told him before you came in.”

Elmer clenched his fists, his breath ragged.

Then he turned and stormed out.


Outside

Tomas was sitting under the moonlight, eyes closed.

Elmer grabbed him by the collar. “You knew?”

Tomas didn’t resist.

“She told me after I was done.”

“And you still let me go in there? Like a lamb to slaughter?”

Tomas’ jaw tightened.

“We made a deal, Elmer. Not about love. About survival.”

“You’re okay with being a father to someone else’s child?”

“We’ve been eating boiled cassava for months, Elmer. Now we have a house. Land. A future.”

He looked his brother in the eyes.

“Don’t confuse pride with pain.”


Final Scene

The next morning, the village woke to a stunning sight: Tomas, Mila, and Elmer all leaving the ancestral house.

They didn’t speak. They just walked — side by side — toward the town center.

Word spread quickly: Mila had filed to rewrite the inheritance clause. The marriage would be annulled. The land sold. The proceeds divided.

No child. No marriage. Just consequences.

As the judge stamped the document, Mila looked at Elmer one last time.

“It could’ve worked. But not with silence.”

He didn’t answer.

Tomas lit a cigarette in the hallway.


Epilogue

Months later, Mila was gone. So was the baby.

Some say she moved to the city. Others whispered she lost the child in grief.

Tomas and Elmer still lived in the mountains, no longer in one hut — but in separate homes, with separate meals, and separate regrets.

What bound them was no longer blood…
But the memory of the woman they both married — and never truly had.