
The glass shattered across the marble floor.
Nobody moved.
Nobody spoke.
Even the music drifting down from upstairs seemed to disappear.
Alejandro stared at Lucia.
As if the words had reached him but his mind refused to accept them.
“My daughter’s… mother?”
Lucia lowered her eyes again.
Tears slid silently down her cheeks.
The woman in the emerald dress found her voice first.
“This is insane.”
Her laugh sounded thin now.
Desperate.
“Alejandro, she’s lying.”
But nobody was looking at her anymore.
Every guest in the doorway was watching Lucia.
Watching Alejandro.
Watching a secret unravel in real time.
Alejandro swallowed.
His heart was pounding so hard he could hear it.
“What did you say?”
Lucia’s hands trembled.
For years she had imagined this moment.
And feared it.
Because the truth had cost her everything once already.
She slowly reached beneath her apron.
The woman in green suddenly stepped forward.
“No.”
The word came too quickly.
Too sharply.
Everyone noticed.
Lucia froze.
Then looked directly at her.
For the first time all night.
The woman took a step back.
Fear flashed across her perfect face.
Lucia reached into her pocket and pulled out a small silver locket.
Old.
Scratched.
Worn from years of being opened and closed.
Alejandro’s face immediately changed.
Because he recognized it.
Twenty-two years ago, he had bought that locket from a street vendor during a trip to Seville.
Inside was a photograph.
One copy for him.
One copy for her.
Lucia opened it with shaking fingers.
The tiny picture inside showed two young people smiling at each other.
Before money.
Before power.
Before everything fell apart.
Alejandro stared at it.
His knees nearly gave out.
“Lucia…”
His voice broke.
The woman in green went pale.
Because she knew exactly what the locket meant.
She had seen it before.
Years ago.
When she had made sure it disappeared.
But apparently it hadn’t.
Lucia looked at him.
“You told me you would come back.”
The room held its breath.
Alejandro closed his eyes.
Because he remembered.
Every word.
Every promise.
Every letter he had sent.
Letters that were never answered.
At least, that’s what he had believed.
Until now.
Lucia reached into the locket.
Slowly.
Carefully.
And removed a folded piece of yellowed paper.
The sight of it made the woman in green suddenly lose all color.
“No…”
The whisper escaped before she could stop it.
Alejandro heard it.
Everyone heard it.
His eyes snapped toward her.
For the first time that night.
And what he saw terrified him.
Not anger.
Not confusion.
Fear.
Pure fear.
Lucia unfolded the letter.
Its edges were worn from being handled hundreds of times.
“I received this three weeks ago,” she said quietly.
Alejandro frowned.
“What is it?”
Lucia looked at him.
“It’s the first letter you ever wrote me.”
His face drained of blood.
Impossible.
He had mailed it twenty years ago.
Lucia nodded.
“It arrived three weeks ago.”
The guests gasped.
The chef covered his mouth.
The woman in green staggered backward.
Because she knew exactly why the letter had taken twenty years to arrive.
She had stolen it herself.
Not just that one.
All of them.
Every letter.
Every photograph.
Every message.
Every piece of evidence that could have reunited them.
Alejandro slowly turned toward her.
The realization hit him like a train.
“You…”
His voice was barely audible.
The woman opened her mouth.
No explanation came.
No denial.
Nothing.
Because her silence told the truth.
For twenty years she had lied.
For twenty years she had manipulated every story.
For twenty years she had convinced Alejandro that Lucia abandoned him.
And convinced Lucia that Alejandro had forgotten her.
The room became deathly still.
Then another voice echoed from the doorway.
A small voice.
A child’s voice.
“Daddy?”
Everyone turned.
Standing at the entrance was a little girl holding a stuffed rabbit.
Seven years old.
Wide eyes.
Dark hair.
And Alejandro’s face.
The color vanished from his cheeks.
Because he had never seen her before.
But he knew instantly.
Without a single test.
Without a single question.
She was his daughter.
The little girl looked around the room nervously.
Then pointed directly at the woman in the green dress.
And said the one sentence that destroyed what remained of her world.
“That’s the lady who paid me not to tell you.”