Arnaldo had di:ed before the truth came out.
He didn’t take it with him.
One day, Gabriel returned to the house alone. He stood in that room and realized something he couldn’t ignore anymore—he had trusted that man. Loved him. Called him grandfather.
Now, all that remained was anger.
Not fear. Not confusion.
Just anger.
Before leaving, he stepped into the yard one last time. The shed was still sealed. He looked at the disturbed earth and imagined Melissa—fifteen, alive, dreaming of something bigger—never knowing the danger was already inside her own home.
“We found you,” he whispered.
Too late. But true.
Over time, things shifted.
Lucía began taking out old photos again. Marco told stories. And slowly, something small returned—Lucía started embroidering daisies again, just like before.
Gabriel realized that this, too, was a kind of justice.
Not from courts or headlines—but from memory.
Melissa was no longer “the girl who disappeared.”
She was remembered properly—
a daughter,
a sister,
a truth that could no longer be buried.
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