Esteban stopped at the side of the bed, breathless and shaking.
“Our daughter?” he whispered.
Sofia reached for him with a weak hand.
“I tried to tell you,” she cried. “Your mother sent every letter back. Then she told me you were married and wanted nothing to do with us.”
Esteban’s face broke.
“No. I never knew.”
The little girl ran into the room behind him and climbed onto the edge of the bed.
“Mommy, I found him.”
Sofia pulled her daughter close with what little strength she had left.
“You were so brave, Lucia.”
Esteban covered his mouth.
Lucia.
That was the name he and Sofia once chose, whispering under summer rain like the future belonged to them.
Then the hospital door opened.
A man in an expensive suit stepped inside, holding a folder.
“There you are,” he said coldly. “The child comes with me.”
Lucia clung to Sofia.
Esteban stepped between them.
“Who are you?”
The man smiled. “The legal guardian. Sofia signed the papers.”
Sofia shook her head weakly. “He forced me. He said if I didn’t sign, Lucia would disappear before I died.”
Esteban’s eyes turned dark.
The man glanced at Esteban’s tuxedo.
“You left your own wedding for a sick woman and a child you just met?”
Esteban looked back at Lucia, whose small fingers were wrapped around her mother’s hospital blanket.
“No,” he said. “I left a lie to find my family.”
The man’s smile faded.
Esteban took the folder, ripped it open, and saw his mother’s signature on the witness line.
His whole body went cold.
“She knew.”
Sofia nodded, tears sliding into her hair.
“She knew from the beginning.”
Esteban turned toward the hallway, where his bride had just arrived with his mother behind her.
His mother’s face was pale.
Lucia hid behind his arm.
Esteban held the torn photo in one hand and the forged papers in the other.
Then he looked at the woman who had raised him and whispered, “You let my child beg for help at my wedding.”
His mother said nothing.
And that silence told him everything.