“Your son gave me his shoes at school,” the poor boy told the millionaire.
She was shocked when she discovered what came next.
—Look, sir, my mom says we can’t accept them.

Ricardo Monteiro felt the marble floor open up beneath his feet. The boy in front of him couldn’t have been more than nine years old. He was barefoot, his jeans were ripped at the knees, and there were dirt stains on his faded shirt.
In his outstretched hands, Bernardo’s white sneakers looked like something from another world. But it wasn’t the boy’s poverty that stopped Ricardo’s heart.
It was her eyes; those honey-colored eyes, with long lashes and a depth he knew better than his own reflection. Eyes that had gazed at him with love 10 years ago. Eyes that were supposedly closed forever in a tomb he never visited.
—What’s your name? —his voice came out strangled.
—Miguel… Miguel Duarte.
Ricardo brought his hand to his mouth. The glass of whiskey he was holding in his other hand slipped and shattered against the marble, scattering golden shards across the mansion’s foyer. Bernardo, his six-year-old son, jumped back.
—Dad, what’s wrong?
But Ricardo couldn’t answer. His mind traveled back 10 years, to a rainy afternoon, when his mother told him the words that destroyed his world: “Elena left with another man, son.
And two weeks ago there was an accident. She’s gone now.” He had cried for months, closed himself off to love, married a woman he didn’t love just to feel something, anything.
The marriage lasted three years before they both admitted it was a sham. And now this child was on their doorstep, with Elena’s eyes, bearing Elena’s last name.
“Your mom…” Ricardo had to hold onto the door frame. “What’s your mom’s name?”
Miguel frowned, confused by the rich man’s reaction.
—Elena. Elena Duarte, do you know her?
The world stopped.
“Elena is alive, sir. Is she alright?” Miguel took a step back, frightened.
Bernardo pulled his father’s sleeve.
“Dad, he’s my friend from school, the one who didn’t have shoes, that’s why I gave him mine. The teacher said I did wrong, but he needed them more than I did, right?”
Ricardo looked at his son, this little boy with a huge heart, who had inherited the kindness that he himself had lost years ago.
Bernardo attended a public school, a choice made by Ricardo, who wanted his son to experience reality and not grow up in a bubble of privilege. He never imagined that this decision would lead to this moment.
“You did well, son,” Ricardo whispered, kneeling in front of Miguel. “You did very well.”
He took off his suit jacket and placed it over the shoulders of the shivering child, even though it wasn’t cold.
—Where do you live, Miguel?
—In San Martín, on the street of the seamstresses.
The poorest neighborhood in the city, 40 minutes from this mansion that suddenly felt obscenely large.
—Does your mom know you came all the way here?
Miguel shook his head, his eyes filling with tears.
“She’s going to scold me, but I wanted to return the shoes. We’re not thieves.”
Ricardo felt something break inside his chest. “No, Miguel, they’re not thieves, they’re my family,” he thought. “And someone stole them from me.” He stood up with a determination he hadn’t felt in a decade.
—Come on, I’ll take you home.
And as he walked toward the car with the two children, Ricardo could only think one thing: Who lied to me? And why?
The car stopped in front of a small house with peeling walls and a wooden door that had once been blue. Ricardo turned off the engine, but he couldn’t move. His hands trembled on the steering wheel.
“It’s here,” said Miguel from the back seat. “Thank you for bringing me, sir.”
-Wait.
Ricardo took a deep breath. 10 years. 10 years believing Elena was dead.
Ten years of nightmares where he saw her leaving on a bus that never reached its destination. Ten years of guilt for not having fought harder against his mother when she opposed the relationship.
“A woman without family, without money, without a future,” Doña Carmen said with disdain. “She is not worthy of a Monteiro.”
And then came the news of his death; convenient, definitive, impossible to verify because Ricardo was too devastated to ask questions.
The front door opened and there she was. Elena.

Thinner, with premature wrinkles around her eyes, her hands reddened from working with needle and thread for endless hours. But it was her, my God, it was her.
—Miguel! Where were you? I’ve looked for you all over…
Elena stopped dead in her tracks when she saw the luxury car. Her face paled when she recognized the man getting out of the vehicle.
“No…” he whispered, backing away. “No, no, no. Elena, stay away from my son!”
The fury in her voice hit Ricardo like a punch.
—Elena, please, I need to understand…
“Understand?” She let out a bitter laugh. “Ten years later you want to understand? After what your family did to me?”
Miguel ran towards his mother, hugging her around the waist.
—Mom, he just brought me home, he didn’t do anything wrong.
But Elena wasn’t listening. Her eyes were fixed on Ricardo, filled with a hatred he didn’t understand.
“Listen to me,” Ricardo said, taking a step toward her. “I was told you were dead. I was told you left with another man and then… dead.”
Elena interrupted him.
—That’s what they told you, and you believed them.
“Why wouldn’t I believe them? You were everything to me, Elena. When they told me you’d left with someone else, that you were dead, it destroyed me.”
Something changed in Elena’s face. Fury gave way to confusion.
—Leave with someone else? Never…
“Mom,” Miguel tugged at her skirt. “What’s going on?”
Elena looked at her son, then at Ricardo, then at the blond boy who was watching everything from the car with wide eyes.
—Come inside the house, Miguel.
—But Mom…
—¡Αhora!
The boy obeyed, but not before casting one last glance at Bernardo, who gave him a small farewell gesture. When the door closed, Elena crossed her arms over her chest as if protecting herself.
“Your mother,” she said in an icy voice, “paid me to disappear. She threatened to destroy my family if I ever came back for you. She told me you knew, that you authorized everything.”
Ricardo felt like the world was collapsing for the second time.
—That’s a lie.
—It is, because the check had your signature, Ricardo.
—What check? I never signed anything.
Elena studied him for a long time, searching for lies, searching for betrayal, but she only found the same pain she had carried a decade ago.
“Go away,” he finally said, “and don’t come back.”
He closed the door. Ricardo stood motionless under the gray sky, with a single certainty burning in his chest: His mother had a lot to explain.
Doña Carmen’s mansion smelled of gardenias and lies.
Ricardo entered without knocking, ignoring the butler who tried to announce him. He found his mother in the tea room, immaculate as always, with her pearl necklace and that superior expression he had mistaken for elegance all his life.
—Ricardo, my dear, what a surprise, so…
—What did you do to Elena?
Doña Carmen placed the porcelain cup on the saucer with a delicate clinking sound.
—I don’t know what you’re talking about.
—Elena is alive, mother. Alive and with a 9-year-old son. With my own eyes.
The silence that followed was more revealing than any confession.
—Sit down, Ricardo.
—I don’t want to sit down. I want the truth.
Doña Carmen sighed as if the conversation bored her.
“I did what any mother would do to protect her child. That woman wasn’t right for you. No education, no respectable family, nothing to offer but a pretty face. And when I found out she was pregnant…”
“Pregnant?” Ricardo had to hold onto the back of a chair. “Did you know I was pregnant?”
—Of course I knew. That’s why I acted quickly.
The confession flowed with the ease of someone who feels no remorse. He had paid her 200,000 pesos to disappear and never return. He had forged Ricardo’s signature on the check.
He had hired a lawyer to monitor her and renew the threats every time Elena tried to make contact.
—She tried to find you twice —Doña Carmen said disdainfully—. Twice my lawyers convinced her it was a bad idea.
Ricardo felt nauseous.
—Convince her? You threatened her.
—I explained the consequences to him, it’s a different matter.
—I have a son, mother. A 9-year-old son who grew up without a father because you decided to play God.
—You have Bernardo.
“Bernardo doesn’t replace Miguel!” Ricardo slammed his fist on the table, making the cups jump. “Nothing replaces the years I lost. My first words, my first steps… everything you stole from me.”

Doña Carmen stood up, cold as the marble of her mansion.
“I gave you a life, Ricardo. A company, a respectable name. If you had ended things with that seamstress, you would have thrown it all away.”
—That seamstress was the love of my life.
—Love doesn’t pay the bills.
Ricardo looked at her as if he were seeing her for the first time. This woman who had raised him, who had taught him to walk, who had read him stories before bed. This stranger with a mother’s face.
“It’s over,” he said with a calmness that surprised even himself.
“I don’t want to see you again, Ricardo. Don’t be so dramatic.”
—I’m serious, Mother. I will never forgive this.
He walked towards the door, but Doña Carmen’s voice stopped him.
“If you go after her, you’ll regret it. That woman hates you, and the child… the child doesn’t even know you.”
Ricardo didn’t turn around.
—Then I’ll have to earn her love like I had to 10 years ago.
She left the mansion with the weight of a decade of lies on her shoulders, but also with something she hadn’t felt in a long time: hope.
The letters arrived in a worn cardboard box, with no return address, no explanatory note, and no indication of who had left them there.
Elena found them on her doorstep one Thursday morning as she was leaving for work, her eyes still swollen from another sleepless night. She almost tripped over them.
For a moment he thought it was some mistaken donation, perhaps used clothing that some neighbor had left by mistake.
But when she saw his name written on the cover, in handwriting she would recognize anywhere, her heart stopped. It was Ricardo’s handwriting.
His first instinct was to throw the box in the trash, burn it, pretend it didn’t exist; just as he had pretended for 10 years that Ricardo Monteiro was just a ghost, a youthful mistake, a closed chapter of his life.
But his hands did not obey. Instead of destroying it, he carried it inside and left it on the kitchen table, where it remained like a ticking time bomb for the next 7 days.
Every morning, while preparing Miguel’s breakfast, she looked at her. Every afternoon, while sewing wedding dresses for other, more fortunate women, she thought about her.
Every night, when the silence in the house became unbearable, she would sit in front of the box and touch it with her fingers, feeling the rough cardboard, wondering what secrets it held. More lies? Elaborate excuses? Or something worse? The truth?
Miguel, with that perception that children have to detect the emotional storms of their parents, noticed the change in his mother.
I saw her quieter, more distracted, with that lost look that only appeared when she looked at the old photos in the drawer.
The photos where she appeared with a young man with blue eyes and an easy smile, a man she had never wanted to identify.
“Mom,” she said one night after finishing her math homework, “what’s in that box?”
Elena was sitting at the kitchen table, the box in front of her as always, a cup of cold tea in her hands.
—Nothing important, my love.
—So why are you staring at her so much? You’ve been staring at her for a week. It’s like you’re afraid she’ll bite you.
Elena let out a sad laugh.
—Perhaps I am afraid of him.
—What’s inside?
—Letters. They’re old letters.
-Whose?
Elena hesitated. She had spent nine years protecting Miguel from the truth, inventing stories about a father who was an astronaut, explorer, international spy; anything but reality.
That her father didn’t know she existed, that her grandmother had paid to make them disappear, that all her suffering had been orchestrated by a woman who had never considered her worthy.
But Miguel was no longer a baby. He was an intelligent, observant child who deserved answers.
—They belong to Bernardo’s father —he finally said—. To Mr. Ricardo.
Miguel’s eyes lit up with curiosity.
—The man who brought me home the other day? The one who was crying when he saw me?
—Yes, that’s the one.
—Why does he write you letters?
—She didn’t write them to me now, Miguel. They’re old, from a long time ago. From before you were born.
The boy processed the information silently with a seriousness that sometimes made him seem like an adult trapped in a small body.
—Why don’t you read them?
—Because I’m scared.
-About what?
Elena looked at her son, this little human being she had raised alone against all odds. She had worked double shifts to pay for his school. She had sacrificed meals so that he would never go hungry.
She had cried silently every night so that he would never see her weak.

And all that time she had harbored a fierce hatred for Ricardo Monteiro, convinced that he had authorized her destruction. What if she was wrong?
“I’m afraid of discovering I was wrong, my love. That I spent 10 years hating someone who didn’t deserve my hatred. That all my suffering, all our suffering, was the fault of one person, and it wasn’t him.”
Miguel remained thoughtful for a moment.
“But if you were wrong,” she said with irrefutable logic, “isn’t it better to know? You always tell me that the truth is important, that lying is wrong. Isn’t lying to yourself also a lie?”
Elena had no answer for that.
“Can I read them?” the boy asked.
—Miguel, I don’t think that…
—Please, Mom. I want to know, I want to understand.
His honey-colored eyes, so similar to hers, so similar to those of the man in the photos, looked at her with a silent plea.
“Mr. Ricardo gave me a strange look when he saw me,” Miguel continued. “Like he knew me. Like he’d been missing me my whole life without knowing who I was.”
And you always cry when you look at the photos in the drawer. I always thought it was because you missed someone who died, but he didn’t die, did he? He’s alive. So why do you cry?
Tears began to roll down Elena’s cheeks, silent but unstoppable.
“Okay,” she whispered, pushing the box toward her son. “Read them, but read them out loud. I want to hear them with you.”
Miguel opened the box with the care of someone handling something sacred. Inside were dozens of envelopes, some yellowed with age, others better preserved, all with the same elegant handwriting and the same red “recipient deceased” stamp over the address. He took the first envelope, the oldest, and opened it with trembling fingers.
“My Elena,” he read in his childlike voice, stumbling over some unfamiliar words. “It’s been three months since you left and I still can’t sleep.”
Every time I close my eyes, I see you. Your smile, the way you wrinkle your nose when you’re concentrating on something, the sound of your laughter that was like wind chimes on a spring day.
My mother says I should forget you, that you found someone better, that you left me for another man, but I can’t believe it. I don’t want to believe it.
You weren’t like this. You loved me. I felt it every time you looked at me. If you read this, please tell me where you are. I’ll find you. I’ll go to the ends of the earth if I have to.
I don’t care what my family says. I don’t care about anything else but finding you. Yours always, Ricardo.
Elena covered her mouth with her hands to stifle a sob.
“Go on,” he murmured. “Keep reading.”
Miguel obeyed. Letter after letter, month after month, year after year. The stack of envelopes dwindled as the night wore on and Elena’s tears formed small puddles on the wooden table.
Ricardo’s words changed over time. The desperate pleas of the first months gave way to a painful resignation. Hope turned into mourning. Mourning into a silence that screamed between the lines.
—Today I went to the place where we met—Miguel read from a letter dated two years after the separation—. The café is still the same, the same table in the corner, the same smell of freshly baked bread.
But you’re not here, and without you, everything seems gray. I wonder if you ever think of me. I wonder if you’re happy with him, with that man who stole you from me. I hope so. I hope at least one of us has found peace.
“What man, Mom?” Miguel asked. “What man robbed you?”
“None, my love,” Elena shook her head. “There wasn’t a single man. That was the lie they told her.”
The last letter was from 7 years ago. Miguel opened it with hands that already knew the ritual.
“My Elena,” he began, and this time his voice trembled as he read. “Today I’m getting married. Not to someone I love, because my heart died with you three years ago.”
I’m getting married because my mother says it’s the right thing to do, because society expects me to move on, because I don’t know what else to do with this empty life you left me.
Her name is Marina. She’s kind, polite, proper—everything my family considers proper—but she’s not you. No one will ever be you. Wherever you are, Elena, I hope you’re happy.
I hope the man you chose loves you the way I never could. And I hope that, if there is another life after this one, we can find each other again and make things right. Yours always and forever, Ricardo.
Miguel closed the envelope and looked at his mother. Elena was crying uncontrollably, her sobs shaking her entire body. Ten years of hatred were crumbling like a sandcastle before the tide of truth. He didn’t know.
“Mom,” said Miguel, coming over to hug her. “He was sad too. Very sad, just like you.”
“I know, my love,” Elena said, pressing him to her chest, feeling the beat of his small heart. “Now I know.”
The next day, with her eyes still swollen but her heart strangely lighter, Elena picked up her phone and dialed the number Ricardo had left in the box.
-Hello?
His voice sounded anxious, as if he had been waiting for that call for days.
—I’m Elena. I read the letters… all of them.
Silence on the other end of the line. Then a trembling sigh.
—Can we talk?
“We can talk, but I’m not promising anything, Ricardo. Ten years is a long time. Some wounds don’t heal with just a conversation.”
“I’m not asking them to heal today, Elena. I’m only asking for a chance. An hour of your time. After that, if you want me to disappear, I will.”
They met in a neutral cafe, far from mansions and humble neighborhoods; a small place with worn wooden tables and the smell of freshly baked bread.
The kind of place where they had their first date ages ago, when they were young and foolish and believed that love was enough.
The conversation lasted five hours. There were tears, accusations, and silences so long the waitress asked three times if everything was alright. But there was also truth, and the truth, however painful, was the first step.
—I want to meet Miguel —Ricardo finally said—. I want to be his father.
“Then prove to me that you’re different from your family,” Elena replied. “Give up everything she gave you. Prove to me that we’re worth more than your name.”
Ricardo did not hesitate.
—I will submit my resignation tomorrow.
And for the first time in 10 years, Elena allowed herself to believe that maybe, just maybe, love could find its way back.
Doña Carmen Monteiro de Villanueva was not a woman who accepted defeat. For 62 years she had built her empire on a foundation of manipulation, secrecy, and the systematic destruction of anyone who dared to challenge her.
She had buried two husbands, disinherited a sister who committed the unforgivable sin of marrying a school teacher, and controlled every aspect of her only son’s life with an iron fist in a velvet glove.
And now that same son thought he could simply turn his back on her, quit the family business, move to a modest house in a middle-class neighborhood, and play at being a happy family with a seamstress and her bastard.
No. That wasn’t going to happen.
The custody lawsuit was her masterstroke.
It arrived at the small house where Ricardo and Elena now lived like a missile of legal destruction. Three of the most expensive lawyers in the city had worked for weeks to build a seemingly irrefutable case:
Elena Duarte was a negligent mother, incapable of providing a suitable environment for a minor.
The evidence was abundant:
Photographs of Elena’s old house in San Martín presented as her current residence; testimonies from neighbors who claimed to have seen her neglecting Miguel; medical reports from a doctor who swore that the child showed signs of chronic malnutrition;
Reports from a social worker who had never visited the home, but who described deplorable conditions in great detail.
All fake. All fabricated. All bought with the endless money of a woman who knew no moral boundaries.
Elena read the lawsuit with trembling hands, sitting in the office of lawyer Fernando Delgado, a gray-haired man with hawk-like eyes and a reputation for never losing a case.
“This is a lie,” her voice trembled with fury. “This is all a lie. Miguel is healthy, he’s happy. He has the best grades in his class. How can a judge believe these fabrications?”
“Money buys many things, ma’am,” Delgado replied calmly. “Witnesses, doctors, officials… but it also leaves traces. Traces that your mother-in-law wasn’t careful enough to erase.”
Ricardo, sitting next to Elena, leaned forward.
—What kind of traces?
—Financial. —Delgado opened a thick folder full of documents—. For the past three weeks, my team has been tracking every single peso that left Doña Carmen’s accounts.
We found transfers to each of the witnesses who testified against Elena, payments to the doctor who signed the malnutrition report (a man whose license was suspended 3 years ago for fraud).
Deposits into the social worker’s account, including fees to a photographer who took pictures of San Martín’s house and edited them to make them look worse than they were.
Elena felt the air return to her lungs.
—Is that enough to win?
“That’s enough to destroy her,” Delgado smiled like a predator smelling blood.
If we present this to the judge, he won’t just lose the custody case. He’ll face criminal charges for bribing public officials, falsifying documents, and witness tampering. We’re talking about years in prison.
Ricardo looked at Elena. He knew what this decision meant. She was his mother, after all; the woman who had raised him, taught him to walk, and read him bedtime stories.
But she was also the woman who had systematically destroyed the life of the person she loved.
“It’s your decision,” Elena said. “She’s your mother.”
“She was my mother,” Ricardo replied without hesitation. “Now she’s just the woman who tried to destroy my family twice. Let her pay the price.”
The trial began in March and lasted four interminable weeks. Doña Carmen arrived at the courthouse on the first day as if she owned the building.
Dressed in impeccable black, with her ever-present pearl necklace shimmering under the fluorescent lights, she walked to her seat with the arrogance of someone who has never known defeat.
Her three lawyers, all men in expensive suits and with shark-like expressions, flanked her like an honor guard.
But money couldn’t buy the truth. One by one, Doña Carmen’s witnesses crumbled under Delgado’s relentless cross-examination.
The doctor admitted to receiving 50,000 pesos to sign a report about a child he had never examined. The social worker confessed that she had copied her report from previous cases, changing only the names.
The neighbors, confronted with evidence that they lived miles away from San Martín, withdrew their testimonies amidst stammering and excuses.
The bank records were the final blow. Projected on a screen for the entire court to see, they revealed a trail of corruption leading directly to Doña Carmen’s personal accounts.
And then came the moment that no one expected.
“Your Honor,” Delgado said on the last day of the trial, “we have one final piece of evidence. A letter written by the minors involved in this case.”
Judge Morales, a stern man with gray hair and eyes that had seen too much, frowned.
—A letter from the children?
—Yes, Your Honor. Miguel Duarte, 9, and Bernardo Monteiro, 6, requested that it be read before the court.
Delgado cleared his throat and began to read:
“Dear judge:
We are Miguel and Bernardo. We’ve been best friends ever since Bernardo gave me his shoes at school. Now we want to be real brothers. We don’t understand why adults fight so much. Please don’t break up our family. We all love each other very much.
With love, Miguel and Bernardo.
P.S. Bernardo wants to be a judge when he grows up.
The silence in the courtroom was absolute. Even Doña Carmen’s lawyers seemed moved. The verdict came two days later.
“This court rules in favor of the defendant,” Judge Morales announced. “Custody of Miguel Duarte remains with his mother.”
Furthermore, a criminal investigation is ordered against Carmen Monteiro de Villanueva for bribery, falsification of documents and witness tampering.
Doña Carmen stood up, pale as death.
—This is unfair! We will appeal…
“Ms. Monteiro,” the judge interrupted her in an icy voice, “I suggest you remain silent. Your passport will be confiscated until the investigation is complete. You may leave.”
Outside the courthouse, under the spring sun, Ricardo took Elena in his arms.
“It’s over,” he whispered. “It’s finally over.”
And right there, in front of the cameras, the onlookers, and the whole world, he knelt down.
—Elena Duarte, I lost you once because of lies. I don’t intend to lose you again. Will you marry me?
Tears rolled down Elena’s cheeks as she nodded.
—Yes… a thousand times yes.
Two children ran towards them laughing, not fully understanding what had happened, but feeling that something wonderful had just begun.
And in the distance, a woman in black walked alone towards a car that would take her to an empty mansion, wondering for the first time in her life if the price of her pride had been too high.
A year later, the garden of the old Monteiro mansion was unrecognizable.
The geometric rose bushes that Doña Carmen had obsessively cared for for decades had been replaced by a chaotic and beautiful vegetable garden where tomatoes grew.
Enormous pumpkins, carrots, and sunflowers that Miguel and Bernardo had planted with their own hands.
The Italian marble fountains, which once spouted water in perfect patterns, now served as drinking troughs for the neighborhood birds.
And the imported gravel paths had given way to local stone roads, uneven but honest, winding between newly planted fruit trees.
The mansion itself had undergone an equally radical transformation.
The intimidating portraits of ancestors with stern expressions had been removed from the walls, replaced by family photographs that told a completely different story:
Ricardo and Elena laughing on the beach, Miguel and Bernardo covered in mud after a football match, the four of them together in the kitchen trying to make a cake that ended up being a delicious disaster.
The tea room, where Doña Carmen had received the city’s elite for decades, was now a playroom filled with books, toys, and the art projects of two children with boundless imaginations.
The formal dining room, where 12-course dinners were once served on fine china, had been converted into an open space where the family dined together every night.
Sometimes pizza, sometimes tacos, always with laughter. The mansion was no longer a museum of excess and pride; it was finally a home.
The wedding was held at sunset, when the sky above the mountains turned orange, pink, and gold.
They had installed an arch of wildflowers in the center of the garden, in front of the old oak tree where Miguel and Bernardo had built their tree house during the summer.
Elena walked down the aisle on the arm of her younger brother.
That same brother whose university scholarship Doña Carmen had threatened 10 years ago was now a doctor; a good man who had cried with joy when he learned that his sister would finally have the happiness she deserved.
Elena’s dress was a work of art that she herself had designed and sewn during months of sleepless nights; simple, elegant, without unnecessary pretensions.
White fabric that flowed like water, with small wildflower embroideries on the hem, each stitch made with love and hope.
Ricardo was waiting for her under the archway, dressed in a navy blue suit he had deliberately chosen. It was the same shade he had worn the day Miguel appeared at his door with a pair of shoes in his hands.
The day her life changed forever.
But what truly took everyone’s breath away were the children. Miguel and Bernardo walked ahead of Elena, carrying the rings on red velvet cushions.
They wore small, perfectly tailored suits, with ties that matched Elena’s dress, and were completely barefoot.
Their small feet left footprints in the damp grass as they walked toward the altar. Their faces were serious, reflecting the responsibility of their mission, their eyes shining with restrained emotion.
“Why aren’t the children wearing shoes?” whispered a distant aunt of Ricardo’s, confused.
—Because that’s how it all started —replied someone who knew the story—. With a pair of shoes that were given away and returned.
The ceremony was brief, but filled with emotion. The justice of the peace, the same Morales who had presided over the trial against Doña Carmen, had agreed to officiate the wedding as a personal favor.
“The promises,” he said, looking at the couple with something akin to affection.
Ricardo took Elena’s hands in his own.
—Elena, I lost you for 10 years. 10 years of darkness where I wondered every day what would have happened if I had fought harder for you. Today I promise you that I won’t waste a single minute of the time we have left.
I will love you when you are happy and when you are sad. I will support you when you are right and when you are wrong. And I will walk beside you, barefoot if necessary, until the last day of my life.
Elena smiled through her tears.
—Ricardo, for 10 years I made you the villain of my story. I blamed you for crimes you didn’t commit. I hated you for betrayals you never made. Today I promise you that I will spend the rest of my life making it up to you for that unjust hatred.
I will be your partner, your confidante, your best friend, and I will never again judge you without hearing your truth.
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