đŸ˜ČđŸ˜„An 85-year-old woman died at the entrance of the market where she sold her wares
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A multimillionaire saw his ex-girlfriend, whom he had left six years earlier, waiting for an Uber with three children who looked exactly like him. What he didn’t know was that those children were JuliĂĄn Castañeda. He had just left a meeting in Polanco, one of those endless meetings where everyone feels important and talks as if they were saving the world. He just wanted to get out of there. He got into his armored SUV, gave his driver his usual instructions, and took out his cell phone to check messages as they drove down a somewhat congested street. He glanced out the window without much
interest. That’s when he saw her. There she was, standing on the sidewalk right in front of a pharmacy, looking tired and a little desperate. Her hair was hastily pulled back, she was wearing simple clothes, and she was clutching a half-torn shopping bag. Beside her were three children, all identical: same eyes, same mouth, same expression. They were looking around as if waiting for something to happen, and those eyes were his. It couldn’t be. It couldn’t be. He leaned forward to get a better look, but just then another car cut in between them, and the image

disappeared. “Stop!” Julián shouted. The driver slammed on the brakes and turned around, worried. Julián opened the door without waiting for a response, got out at street level, and looked around desperately. The sidewalk was crowded as always, but she wasn’t there anymore. He walked quickly through the pedestrians, searching for her, ignoring the comments of those who recognized him. His heart was pounding. It was her. It was Valeria. And those children. After a few minutes, he saw her crossing the street hand in hand with the three children, getting into a gray car that was clearly an Uber. He froze, feeling his
stomach clench. He didn’t know whether to run, scream her name, or just let her go. The car started and disappeared into the afternoon traffic. Julián didn’t move; he just stood there, watching how that scene had left him trembling. He returned to his truck almost automatically. He didn’t say anything. The driver looked at him in the rearview mirror, but Julián didn’t say a word. He was completely out of it. The only thing he could think about was those three children with the same face as him. He grabbed his forehead, closed his eyes, and let out a sigh that came from the

depths of his soul. He hadn’t seen Six years have passed since that early morning when he decided to leave without saying goodbye to Valeria. He didn’t leave her a single message, nothing. They were fine, yes, but he had plans. He was about to close a deal that would change everything. He left thinking she would understand, that there would be time later to fix things, but that time never came. The car continued on its way to his apartment in Santa Fe. When he arrived, Julián angrily took off his jacket and threw it onto the sofa. He poured himself a drink, even though it wasn’t even 5 a.m. yet.
Late, he paced back and forth, remembering everything he had experienced with Valeria: her laughter, the way she gazed at him when he talked about his dreams, the way she hugged him when he came home late and just wanted to sleep. Then he thought about those children—how could they be so much like him? He picked up his phone and searched social media. Nothing, not a photo, not a clue. Valeria had vanished from the digital world as if she had never existed. This made him feel strange because he had tried to forget her, but deep down, he

never could. It was the kind of love you keep locked away in a little box you never want to open again because you know it will hurt. He sat down at his computer, opened an encrypted folder where he kept personal files, and looked for old photos. There they were: Valeria at the beach, Valeria in her apartment, Valeria with her dog, Valeria in pajamas, laughing with her mouth full of popcorn. He looked at them one by one until he came across one where she was hugging him from behind, her face pressed against his neck. She had taken the photo herself
with her phone. He stared at it for a long time and then pursed his lips. He knew what he had to do. Julián called his assistant, Mateo. “I need you to find someone. Her name is Valeria Ortega. I don’t have an address. I only know she lives in Mexico City and has three children. And one more thing: could those children be mine?” There was an awkward silence on the other end of the line. “Understood, sir,” Mateo said. He hung up and stared out the window at the city—thousands of lights, thousands of people. But at that moment, only one mattered to him. He didn’t know if she was angry, if she hated him, or if she had simply

moved on. But he couldn’t leave those children like this. He couldn’t live with the doubt because if they were what he thought, then his life was about to change completely. The next morning, he woke up with only one thing on his mind: to find her. And this time, he wasn’t going to leave without answers. Julián didn’t sleep well that night. He tossed and turned, stared at the ceiling, then got up, walked around the apartment, threw himself back down on the sheets, closed his eyes, and saw that scene again: Valeria standing in the street with her three children, so similar to

him that it even hurt. It was as if his past had suddenly returned without warning. He would have slapped her right in the face the next day. Before 8 a.m., he was already in his office. His team greeted him as always, respectfully, with forced smiles. He barely responded. He went straight to his office, closed the door, and stared out the window. The whole city continued with its routine: cars, people, noise, but inside, everything was chaos. He sat down at his desk, grabbed his cell phone, and started checking social media again. He searched for his name, his face.

There was no trace of Valeria, not on Facebook, not on Instagram, not anywhere. It was as if she had vanished into thin air. That only made him angrier. How could someone disappear so easily? How could he, with all his resources, have no idea about anything? Mateo arrived with coffee and some papers. Julián barely looked at him. “Something?” he asked bluntly. “Not yet, boss. We’re tracking her down using birth certificates and school records. But if she changed her address and last name, it’s going to take a while.” Julián nodded. He wasn’t in the mood for conversation. When Mateo left, he was alone again.
He rested his elbows on the desk, grabbed his head with both hands, and closed his eyes. Memories began to flood back, as if someone were showing him a movie. He saw himself six years earlier, younger, less tired, with that ambition that practically oozed from his pores. At that time, he and Valeria lived together in a small apartment in Narbarte. They didn’t have luxuries, but they had everything they needed. He worked from home, putting together presentations, looking for investors, trying to launch his first company. She was a preschool teacher. She would arrive
exhausted, but always with a smile. They would laugh. They’d order pizza at night for silly things, sometimes they couldn’t afford gas, and they’d shower with cold water, but they were together, and that was enough back then. But then an opportunity arose: a foreign fund wanted to invest in his project, but he had to move to Monterrey for a year. That’s when everything changed. He asked her to come with him, but she said she couldn’t leave her job, her students, everything she had. They argued many times, each argument growing louder, until one early morning, without a word, he grabbed his backpack, his
laptop, a few papers, and left. He left her a silly note that said, “I’m sorry, I can’t stay.” That’s how cowardly he was. He never heard from her again. He thought about writing to her several times, but he always put it off. Then his company exploded. The Tonis, the trips, the millions, the interviews, the luxuries arrived, but sometimes when he was alone, he remembered Valeria, and it hurt. Now all of that was coming back as if no time had passed, as if life were telling him, “You’re not finished with this chapter.” Julian stood up from his chair
and walked to the wall where he had a display case filled with mementos, awards, photos with politicians, and recognitions from businesspeople. But there was a small box tucked away at the back, filled with things he hadn’t touched in years. He took it down, placed it on the table, and opened it. Inside were a red string bracelet that Valeria had given him when they were starting out, a handwritten letter in her handwriting, a movie ticket, and an old, positive pregnancy test. He stared at it, his blood running cold. He didn’t remember putting it away; maybe she had left it there.

Before he left, maybe back then he didn’t want to understand, but now, seeing that proof and remembering the children, everything made sense. She had been pregnant, and he had left. He sat down again, stared at the ceiling, feeling anger, sadness, guilt—all mixed together. He didn’t know what hurt more: having left her alone at that moment or having missed six years of those children’s lives. His cell phone vibrated; it was a message from Mateo. It said, “We found something. I’ll send you the address in five minutes.
” Julián stared at the screen, took a deep breath. He knew that message would take him straight to the place where everything changed. What he didn’t know was if he was ready to face it. Julián arrived at the address Mateo had sent him an hour later. He didn’t want a driver. He drove alone in his truck with the music off and his hands sweating on the steering wheel. The area wasn’t dangerous, but it wasn’t like the places he used to go either. Now there were potholed streets, taco stands, people sitting outside houses, children playing soccer barefoot. When he parked the truck, he stood for
a few seconds looking at the old building with peeling paint. But it didn’t look abandoned. He checked the number twice; it was there. He looked toward the third floor. He didn’t know which apartment she lived in, but something in his chest told him she was there. At that moment, he didn’t dare go up. He thought about knocking, but he didn’t know what to say. “Hi, I’m the idiot who got you pregnant six years ago.” He laughed half-heartedly, ran a hand over his face, and decided to wait. Mateo had told him she left for work every day around
4:00. It was 3:30, so he stayed in the car, staring at the building as if it were an enemy. At 4:00 sharp, the building door opened. Valeria came out with the three children. They were all neatly combed and carrying small backpacks, walking like soldiers. She had a large bag over her shoulder and her cell phone in her hand. They were walking toward the corner where the minibuses passed. JuliĂĄn got out of the car without thinking; his legs moved on their own. He crossed the street, caught up with them on the sidewalk, and when he was less than three meters away, he said her name: Valeria. She turned around immediately
and froze. The children stopped too. Looking at him curiously, the silence lasted a few seconds that seemed like hours. She didn’t say anything, she just stared at him as if she couldn’t believe she was there. “Can we talk?” Julián said in a low but firm voice. Valeria lowered her gaze, didn’t greet him, didn’t ask anything, she just told the children to go ahead and wait at the corner store. They obeyed without saying a word. Then she looked him straight in the eyes. “What are you doing here?” Julián swallowed hard.
He knew where to start. “I saw you a few days ago. Were you waiting for an Uber with them?” She didn’t answer, she just kept looking at him, not fearfully, but very coldly. “Don’t tell me it was by chance that you found me,” he finally said in a dry tone, “because I don’t believe you at all.” “It was just a coincidence that day,” he replied quickly, “but not today. Today I came because I need to know. To know if they’re mine.” Valeria crossed her arms and took a deep breath as if she were holding back a scream. “And if they are, then what? What are you going to do? Are you going to take them away? Are you going to take them out of their lives and put them in yours, full of luxuries
and things they don’t even understand? I don’t just want to get to know them, to know about them. I didn’t know anything, Valeria.” She looked at him with shining eyes, but didn’t cry a single tear. “You didn’t know? Why didn’t you care about staying? Why did you leave as if I didn’t exist? You didn’t even ask if I was okay. You left me with a note from Julián.” He lowered his gaze. He had no way to defend himself against that. “You’re right,” he said, barely audible. “And now what? Are you coming here to play the repentant father, the man who has everything and wants to fill the void with something he abandoned?” “I’m not here to do anything. I’m here to
take on whatever I have to take on. If they’re mine, I want to be here, not to take them away from you, not to change their lives.” Just to be there, Valeria looked at him with a mixture of anger and sadness. Then she saw the children who were already calling her from the little store. She looked at her watch. “I have to go. I work at 5. I don’t have time for this.” “Can I see you another day?” he asked, almost begging. “I don’t know. I don’t know if I want that. I don’t know if I want to bring you into our lives again. It was so hard for us to get ahead. Just one more time, a coffee, a neutral place. You choose.” She hesitated. She thought about it for a few seconds,
then took out her cell phone, opened the notes app, and wrote something. She showed him the screen: “Tomorrow at 6 at that coffee shop. If you’re a minute late, I’m leaving.” JuliĂĄn nodded. She turned around without saying anything else, went to get her children, took all three of their hands, and walked away as if nothing had happened. He stood there, feeling like a huge stone had been placed on his chest, but he also felt something else. There was a small opportunity, but there it was. JuliĂĄn couldn’t concentrate on anything for the rest of the day. He canceled a meeting with investors, ignored his fiancĂ©e’s messages, and locked himself in his
apartment. He paced the living room like a lion. He was trapped inside, phone in hand, checking the cafe’s address every five minutes as if it were about to disappear. He had a date with Valeria the next day, but his mind couldn’t wait any longer. Something inside him wouldn’t let him rest; he had to know more. He poured himself a whiskey neat, took a long sip, and sat down at his computer. He checked his email, found Mateo’s direct contact, and sent him a short message: “I need to know more about Valeria. Anything you can find about schools.”
Children, work, anything urgent. Not even five minutes had passed when Mateo called him. “Are you sure, boss? This could be delicate. Do it. I want to know if they’re mine. I’m not going to wait for her to tell me.” Mateo hesitated but agreed. They hung up, and Julián stayed there staring at the screen. His fingers were trembling. He knew it wasn’t right, that he was crossing a line, but he couldn’t help it. He had that feeling in his stomach, that mix of anxiety and fear. Something inside him was screaming that those children were his. He didn’t need proof; he had
seen them. It was like looking in a mirror divided into three. He tried to sleep for a while, but it was useless. He went on social media again with no results. Then he Googled, “How to know if a child is your son or daughter without official proof?” The answers were absurd. He shut everything down and threw himself on the couch, eyes wide open, staring at the ceiling. The clock read 2 a.m. The next day dawned with a light fog. Julián got up early, more out of nerves than habit. He showered, changed his shirt three times, and left more than an hour
early. He arrived at the cafĂ©, asked for a table in the corner away from the windows, and sat down, his leg bouncing. He checked his watch every two minutes. People were coming and going, but Valeria hadn’t arrived. When it was 10 minutes to 6, he thought she wasn’t coming. His heart sank, but right at 6 o’clock sharp, the door opened, and there she was. She was alone, wearing a simple blouse, her hair pulled back in a ponytail. She wasn’t wearing makeup or accessories, just her, as always. JuliĂĄn remembered her. He stood up without saying a word. Valeria approached, sat down across from him, and looked him
straight in the eye. “You have 15 minutes,” she said. He nodded, sat back down, and took a breath. “Thank you for coming. I didn’t do it for you,” she said immediately. “I did it to drop off my things.” “Clear.” Julián lowered his gaze for a second and then looked back at her. “I want to know if the children are mine. I’m not here out of remorse or guilt. I’m here because I need to know the truth. And if I tell you yes, what are you going to do? Support them, be a part of their lives, even if you don’t want me around?” She looked at him with a serious face. “You can’t arrive six years late and pretend that everything will just fall into place. You don’t know what this has been like, raising them alone, working in
”

Two places that work miracles with money, and you
 you didn’t even ask. I know. I have no excuse. So why now? Because I saw them. Because I saw myself in them. Because I can’t pretend nothing happened. Valeria remained silent. It was clear she was about to say something stronger, but she didn’t. Instead, she took a piece of paper from her bag. It was a folded sheet. “This is the most I’m going to give you for now,” she said, placing it on the table. Julián grabbed it. It was a copy of one of the children’s birth certificates. He read the name Emiliano Ortega in the
blank space for the father. “Why didn’t you put me? Because you weren’t there. Because I didn’t even know if you wanted to be a part of it. And because I wasn’t going to beg anyone to be a dad.” Julián clutched the paper in his hands, then put it in his jacket. “And the other two, same case. They don’t have a father registered.” He nodded, swallowing hard. He remained silent for a few seconds. “Can I see you talk to them? Not now. They’re not ready. They don’t understand who you are, and I don’t want you approaching them with promises you won’t keep. I’m not going to let them down.” ” You said that last time,” the phrase
hit him like a blow. Julián didn’t answer. Valeria looked at him harshly, but deep down, her eyes were also tired, as if she were fed up with carrying everything alone. “Can I help you?” he asked, almost in a whisper. “Anything? School, food, clothes. I’m not asking for anything, just let me do it. I don’t want your money.” “Julián, it’s not about money, it’s about them.” She looked at him silently, then checked the time. “Your time’s up.” She got up, grabbed her bag, and left. She didn’t turn around, she didn’t say goodbye. Julián stayed there alone with his cold coffee and his head full of questions.
Doubt was eating him up inside, and even though she wouldn’t confirm it outright, he already knew. He felt it in his bones. Those children were his, and he wasn’t going to stop until he proved it. Julián had been turning the same idea over in his mind for two days. Valeria wasn’t telling him all this, but he was absolutely certain. There were many things that didn’t add up: the birth certificates without a father, her complete disappearance from social media, the way she looked at him with so much resentment. There was a story there that he He didn’t know and couldn’t
wait any longer for her to tell him willingly, so he decided to look for someone who knew. He remembered Jimena, a mutual friend from when he and Valeria were together. She was one of those nice, cool, gossipy, good-natured girls who knew everything about everyone, and if anyone could have a clue about what happened to Valeria after she left, it was her. He sent her a direct message: “I need to see you. It’s about Valeria.” Jimena replied quickly: “Valeria Ortega, you looking for Valeria after 1000 years? This is going to be good.” They agreed to meet.
They met at a restaurant in La Condesa. She arrived late, as always, with her boisterous energy and a dress that drew attention from across the street. She sat down across from Julián, smiled at him as if no time had passed, and leisurely picked up the menu. “Now you’re going to tell me why you ran away like a coward years ago and now you’re back here acting like you’ve lost something?” Julián wasn’t in the mood for jokes. “Jimena, I need to know something. What happened to Valeria after I left?” She looked at him, put down the menu, and crossed her arms. “Why are you asking that now?
Because I saw her. She’s here in the city. She has three children.” Jimena’s eyes widened. “What? Three? And they’re mine. I know it, even if she won’t tell me. I know it.” Jimena was silent for a few seconds, then sighed. “I knew this was going to happen someday.” “Did you know what? Look, I don’t know all the details, but I do know that after you left, Valeria disappeared. One day she quit her job, closed her Facebook account, stopped answering calls and messages. Nobody knew anything. I thought she’d left the country or something, but one day About a year later, I
ran into her at a small store. She was pushing a double stroller and carrying a child. I almost fainted. I asked her, “What’s up? What happened? Why didn’t you ever say anything? You just said there was nothing to say.” Julián clenched his jaw. I could feel his heart beating faster. “Didn’t she tell you they were mine?” “No, but she didn’t have to say it. I mean, hello, they were like photocopies of you. And honestly, the way she mentioned you was weird, like she was in pain but also wanted to stop talking about it. She told me she was fine, that she was
managing, that she had help from an aunt, and that she didn’t need anyone, not you, not me, not anyone.” Julián was silent. His face was burning. I didn’t know if it was from shame or anger. Where did she live back then? I don’t know. She didn’t want to tell me. I only knew that she worked at a daycare near Istapalapa, but she didn’t last long there. Later, I found out she was fired because a jealous dad found out she was a single mother with triplets and made a scene. “See why I’m telling you no?” She had it easy and no one else helped her, no one. She didn’t want help, she
shut herself off in her own world, she didn’t want anyone to see her upset. She was always that stubborn, strong but stubborn. Julián leaned back in his chair, his shoulders, his head, his soul felt heavy. “Why didn’t she tell me? Why didn’t she look for me?” Jimena looked at him with a raised eyebrow. “Seriously? Are you asking me that after leaving her speechless?” “Look, I love you, but you did something awful.”
“Valeria didn’t look for you because she didn’t want to beg, because she knew that if you weren’t there to stay, it wasn’t worth having you around. You chose to leave, she chose to follow.” The silence became uncomfortable. Julián didn’t know what to say. He had never heard all of this so bluntly. He had always carried the guilt, yes, but hearing how things really were was different. It hurt him deeply. Jimena looked at him more calmly. “Are you going to get a DNA test?” “Yes, soon, but I don’t think I need it anymore.” “Well, you better be serious if you go back into that situation, because if you leave again, this time there’s no going back.” Julián nodded. He didn’t
promise anything, he didn’t say anything grand; he just knew that from that moment on, there was no turning back. That afternoon, Julián couldn’t take it anymore. He didn’t want any more twists and turns, or hints, or loose ends. He had spoken with Jimena, he had seen the birth certificate, he had felt that pang in his chest from the first moment he saw the children, and he was tired of carrying the doubt. So he went to look for Valeria. He waited outside the building where she lived. He called beforehand, didn’t warn her, just stood there leaning against his truck with a sour look on his face. He was determined to
talk and wasn’t going to leave without answers. He didn’t care anymore if she got angry, yelled, or told him to get lost. All he wanted was to hear the whole truth. At 5:30, he saw her come out with the three children. They were dressed the same as last time, with small backpacks, their hair neatly combed, talking amongst themselves. She was walking quickly, with that “I’m late” look that all mothers who do a million things a day have. When she saw him, she stopped dead in her tracks. “What are you doing here?” she said without moving. “We need to talk.” He replied bluntly. “Not again with the
same thing. We already talked. I gave you space. I told you what I had to say. What more do you want? I want the whole truth, no beating around the bush.” ​​The children stared at the scene, not quite understanding. Julián crouched down and spoke to them with a forced smile. “May I speak with your mother for a moment, just a little while?” They looked at him curiously. One of them, Emiliano, was the first to answer, “You’re my mother’s friend.”
“Valeria immediately went ahead. ‘Go to the juice stand. I’ll catch up in five minutes. Don’t wander off.’ The children obeyed. As soon as they were a few steps away, she turned around, arms crossed and a sharp gaze. ‘What part of “I don’t want this anymore” didn’t you understand? I don’t care if you want it or not. I’m not here to fight. I’m here because it’s my right to know. It’s not just your story, Valeria, it’s mine too. Mine too.’ She mocked with an ironic laugh. ‘Do you remember that? I’m years too late. Because when you left, you didn’t say, “It’s our story.” You said, “I’m leaving.” Just like that, you didn’t give me a choice. I know, I’ve been told, and I don’t deny it, but
I’m here now, not to redeem myself, nor to ask for your forgiveness a hundred times. I’m here because I’m not going to go on without knowing the truth. I want to know if they are my children. Yes, they are. She blurted out the phrase, knocking him down. It wasn’t shouted, it wasn’t angry, it was dry, cold, hard, like when someone throws a glass on the floor and you don’t need to see it to know it’s broken. All three of them, yes, all three are yours, Julián. He closed his eyes for a second, everything inside him churned, his throat tightened, he opened his mouth but no words came out. Valeria looked at him with red eyes, holding back whatever it was she had
inside. She didn’t cry, she didn’t break down, but it was clear she was on the verge. And before you ask, yes, I knew from the first day. I knew I was pregnant. A week after you left, I thought about calling you, about looking for you, but I couldn’t, I didn’t want to. I was scared, I was angry, I was ashamed, all at once. So I dealt with it alone. Why didn’t you tell me anything? Because you wouldn’t have believed me. Because you were in another world. Because I was a memory to you, not a person. And because I wasn’t going to raise my children with someone who left without looking back. Julián gritted his
teeth. You have no idea how many times I thought about coming back, about calling you, but I was afraid. I told myself you’d be fine, that I’d ruin everything. And what are you doing now then? Are you coming to fix it with a hug and a check? I’m not coming to ask you for a chance, not with you, but with them. Valeria looked at him. This time she didn’t answer immediately. She thought about it, crossed her arms, and took a deep breath. They don’t know who you are. They’ve never met you. They’ve never asked me for a dad because they haven’t needed one, and now you appear out of nowhere with a face like, ‘I’m here
to be responsible.’ It’s not that easy. I don’t want it to be easy. I just want you to let me approach them little by little, with respect, calmly. I’m not asking you to forgive me. I’m asking you to let me get to know them. And what are you going to tell them? That you’re their magic dad who appeared after six years? I don’t know. I have no idea how to do this. I only know that if I leave again, I won’t be able to live with that. Valeria remained silent. The silence between them was so strong that
 They could hear car horns in the background and a woman shouting the price of tamales. After a while, she spoke: “
I’ll think about it, but if you ever enter their lives, you can’t leave. You can’t do this halfway because if you’re going to hurt them, I’d rather you never see them.” “I’m not going to leave,” Julián said without hesitation. Valeria nodded slowly. She didn’t say anything more. She walked over to where the children were, took their hands, and left without looking back. But this time something was different. This time she hadn’t kicked him out; she had let him stay. One step, however small, was already a start. Ever since Valeria told him the children were his, Julián couldn’t think of anything else. He didn’t care about work, the unanswered emails

Important calls piled up, went straight to voicemail, everything else disappeared. Only three names existed in his head: Emiliano, Leo, and Mateo, his sons. But despite what Minersin had said, something inside him wouldn’t leave him alone. He wanted to be sure, he needed to be sure, not because he doubted her, but because he had a crazy need to confirm that he wasn’t dreaming. It was as if his head was asking for physical proof, a piece of paper, something that would tell him, “Yes, they are yours, there’s no going back.” And although he knew it was
wrong, that it wasn’t the right path, he let himself be carried away one Thursday at the school exit where the children were going. Julián waited inside his truck, parked a block away, hidden behind tinted windows. He had found out which school it was through Mateo. He didn’t tell Valeria anything, didn’t ask for permission, he just went. He had a plan in mind and he was going to carry it out without thinking too much about the consequences. When he saw the children come out, he felt a pit in his stomach. They were walking together, laughing, playing with their backpacks. They looked so much like him that it even made him want to cry. A
tall man with a beard who worked as an assistant at the school was guiding them to a small bench while they waited for someone to pick them up. Julián got out of the car with a small bag in his hand and walked towards them with a firm step. “Hello,” he said, smiling. “Do you remember me?” “I’m Julián, your mom’s friend.
” Emiliano recognized him instantly. “Yes, the one who spoke to you outside the building. Listen, can I ask you something? It’s for a surprise, but I need something of yours. Does anyone have any gum, a toothbrush, or anything you’ve used?” Leo pulled a chewed lollipop from his pocket. Julián bent down, carefully picked it up, put it in a small plastic bag, and smiled. “Perfect, thanks, champ. You’ll see what a great surprise I have for you.” The children looked at him, not quite understanding, but didn’t say anything else. Just as he was leaving, Valeria appeared, carrying her bag in a hurry as always. She saw him from afar and frowned. She walked
straight toward him. “What are you doing here? I was just passing by. I wanted to see the children come out, that’s all.” “Did you touch them?” “Of course not.” She crossed her arms, not believing him. “I don’t want you hanging around without warning.” “Understood?” “Yes, I just wanted to see you.” Valeria took the three of them by the hand and left without saying goodbye. Julián stood there for a while, watching them walk away. Then he went back to the car, opened the glove compartment, and He placed the small bag with the lollipop inside a special box. The next day he sent it to a private laboratory and requested a test.
Urgent DNA test. He already had samples of his own saliva saved. Everything was ready. The result arrived three days later: positive. Emiliano was his son. It said it in large letters in an encrypted email that he could barely read without his hands trembling. He sat in front of the computer, took a deep breath, and closed his eyes. He knew it, he felt it, but seeing it there in an official document with numbers, codes, and percentages shook his world. That day he bought toys—three identical ones—new books, backpacks, shoes, clothes. He filled the trunk with things he thought they might need. He sent
Valeria a message: “I need to talk to you. It’s urgent.” She didn’t answer the first, second, or third message; she left him on read. Two days later, he showed up unannounced at her work. Valeria was leaving a coffee shop where she washed dishes in the afternoons. When she saw him, she stopped dead in her tracks. “What are you doing here? Are you following me? We need to talk. It’s important.” “What did you do now?” “I took a test.” She looked at him confused. “What DNA test?” “I used a sample from Emiliano.” “I’m sorry, I needed it.” Valeria pushed him angrily.
“Are you sick or what? You can’t go around collecting my things.” “Children without permission? Who do you think I am? I’m their father!” Julián shouted. People turned around, some stopped. She lowered her voice, but her face burned. “You have no right! You have no damn right! You lied to me, you deceived me, you pretended you just wanted to meet them, and you orchestrated this behind my back. I was afraid you’d shut me out again. I needed to know. I couldn’t stand the doubt anymore.” “And that gives you permission to invade our space like this? No, but I did it anyway, and I don’t regret it because now I know it’s real, that I’m not crazy, that I have children, that
I’m not imagining them.” Valeria froze. She didn’t know whether to scream, cry, or hit him, but in the end, she just looked at him with disappointment. “And now what? Are you going to test the other two too? Are you going to buy them love with new toys and pretty pictures? I don’t want to buy anything. I want to be here for real.” She looked at him for a long time, then turned around, went back into the cafe, and closed the door without looking back. Julián stayed outside alone with the bags in the trunk, his hands empty, but inside him, the obsession was no longer doubt, it was certainty, and he wasn’t going to
stop. Daniela Luján had a knack for noticing when something was wrong, and Julián, though very good at business, at keeping a poker face, and at getting his way with her, couldn’t pretend for long. Something in his attitude had changed: he arrived late, he got distracted in meetings, he remained silent during dinners, he left his cell phone face down, something he never did before, and worst of all, he had become cold, as if his head were in another world, one where she no longer existed. She watched him for days without
She said nothing, she just analyzed him silently with her eyes while he believed everything was under control, until one day while Julián was showering, Daniela unlocked his cell phone. It wasn’t difficult; he still used the same password he’d had for years. She went straight to the messages. The first thing she read was, “I need to talk to you. It’s urgent. It was for someone named Valeria.
” She scrolled down, checked more short but intense messages, words like “children,” “proof,” and “I’m sorry, I need to be with you.” Her body froze; she felt anger rise in her chest. She didn’t cry, she didn’t scream, she just turned off the screen, left her phone where it was, and walked away as if nothing had happened. That night she didn’t say a word, she simply ate dinner across from Julián with a forced smile, asking about business, feigning interest, but inside she was seething. She knew she couldn’t confront him yet; first she needed more, she needed proof, and she was going to get it. The next day she sent her assistant, Lucero, to investigate. She gave her a name, Valeria Ortega, and asked for a
full report. It wasn’t the first time he had used his contacts for personal matters; he had done it before, and she knew exactly who to call. Meanwhile, she began to follow Julián. She hired a driver with clear orders not to lose sight of him. Julián moved between the office, a public school in Itacalco, an old building in Narbarte, and a coffee shop where he met with a woman. The driver took photos and sent them to Daniela. She looked at them all, one by one, and with each image, her rage grew. When she finally had
all the information, she read it through gritted teeth. Valeria A single mother and teacher with no support network, no known partner, three children, age 6, born 6 months after she and Julián broke up, felt humiliated, used, betrayed. She wasn’t just hiding something from him; she was hiding the biggest thing a person could have: a parallel family. Because that’s what it was, even though he hadn’t been present all those years, even though she was just getting to know them now, the facts were the same: he had children with another woman and hadn’t told her. That night she waited for him, awake,
sitting on the couch with the folder in her hand when he entered the apartment. “Are you okay?” Julián asked, seeing her serious face. “What do you think?” she replied without moving. He looked at her strangely, took off his jacket, but when he saw the folder in her hand, he understood everything. “Where did you get that? I’m not stupid, Julián.” He sat down on the other side of the couch in silence. “Since when?” she asked. “Not long ago, I didn’t know.” “And were you planning to tell me, or were you going to marry me hiding this from me? I don’t know, I didn’t even think about it. It all happened so fast.”
“Did you sleep with her while you were with me? Wasn’t it before? A long time ago? I didn’t know anything.” Daniela stared at him, not entirely believing him, but she didn’t interrupt. “And what do you plan to do now?” “I don’t know, I’m processing it. I don’t want to abandon them. I don’t want to repeat the same mistakes. And where do I fit into all this?” Julián didn’t know what to say. He remained silent as if every word that came to mind was another bombshell. Daniela stood up, walked around the room, taking deep breaths, then turned and looked at him with that face of a woman who knows she holds the
power in that moment. “I’m going to tell you something, Julián. I’ve been with you since you were a nobody, before you were a star businessman, since you slept in your office to avoid paying rent. I helped you build everything you have. I used my contacts, I invested money, I bet on you, and I appreciate it. I don’t want your gratitude, I want loyalty.” He remained silent. “If you decide to stay with that woman and those children, you and I are finished. And I’m not just leaving, I’m taking everything I can: investors, contracts, image.” “I’m going
to make you lose more than just a relationship. You’re going to end up alone. Do you understand that, Julián?” He looked at her, surprised. He had never seen her like this, cold and calculating. It wasn’t a threat; it was a declaration. Daniela left that night without saying goodbye, but before leaving, she left an envelope on the table. Inside was a copy of Emiliano’s birth certificate and a handwritten message: “I do know how to play dirty, Julián. You decide how this ends.” Julián woke up that Monday with a splitting headache. He hadn’t slept a wink since Daniela left, leaving him with that envelope and
that clear threat. He hadn’t had a moment’s peace. His mind was filled with noise, thoughts, doubts, anger. His cell phone was full of messages from the team, missed calls from partners, and worst of all, a scheduled meeting with the board of directors of his company, to which Daniela also belonged. He dressed listlessly, got into his truck, and drove straight to the office. As soon as he got out to the private parking lot, he saw Daniela’s black Audi there in its place and knew she had come to do what she had promised. Nothing was a coincidence with her. If she told him she was going to ruin him, it was
because she had the means to
 He did it when he entered the boardroom. Everyone was already seated: the main partners, the accountants, the legal director, and of course, Daniela, sitting in the back in her white dress, her smile controlled as if absolutely nothing had happened. But he knew her; he knew that face was just a disguise for someone who carried dynamite in her purse. Julian, one of the partners, said, “Daniela told us there’s something urgent we need to discuss with you.” He froze for a second. Daniela spoke up. “Yes, I requested this meeting.”
Because I think it’s important that we talk about stability, reputation, leadership—things that have been a bit weak lately. The tone was friendly but full of venom. Julián stared at her without interrupting. She continued speaking as if she were giving a lecture. “We’ve all noticed that you’ve been disconnected. Your performance has dropped, your participation in key projects has been minimal, and well, there are concerns about your public image.” One of the investors shifted uncomfortably in his chair. “What exactly are you talking about?”
Julián asked firmly. Daniela looked at him with a smile that burned with what everyone already knows or is about to find out: your personal life, Julián. The one that has kept you distracted, running after an ex-girlfriend and some kids no one knew, and on top of that, leaving deals unfinished. He tensed up. He hadn’t thought she was going to talk about it like this in front of everyone. “My personal life has nothing to do with what we do here.” “Of course it does,” she interrupted. “Because when your name is in the media, when your personal decisions affect the company’s credibility, of course it has everything to do with it, and believe me,
questions have already started being asked, and not all the answers will be helpful.” The silence grew thick, leaving them in a good position. Julián clenched his fists on the table. He knew she could do it, that she had contacts in the press, that she could manipulate headlines, that she knew where to strike. “What do you want?” Daniela finally blurted out, crossing her arms. “I want you to put everything in its place, to distance yourself from Valeria Ortega, from her children, from that story, and to refocus on what really matters. And if I don’t, then I’m going to
leak everything, from your neglect of responsibilities to the dirtiest details. You know what sells? The story of the millionaire who left his girlfriend pregnant with triplets and now wants to come back as a hero. It’s going to explode on social media. You’re going to lose clients, trust, support. You wouldn’t do that. You don’t know me as well as you think.” An awkward silence fell. No one said anything, no one defended him; they just looked at him as if they were already waiting for his decision. Julián left the room without a word, locked himself in his office, closed the blinds, sat down, rested his elbows on the
desk, and clutched his head in both hands. Everything he had built, everything
 The one he had cared for for years was at risk, and the worst part was that he felt he deserved it for having abandoned her, for having come back late, for not knowing how to handle this without breaking something. That day he didn’t go to see Valeria, he didn’t answer her messages, he stayed locked up, he didn’t even eat, he just kept thinking about what he was going to do. He felt that if he took one path he would lose something; if he chose Valeria and the children, Daniela would destroy his career.
If he chose to protect the company, he would be betraying his own flesh and blood, three children who hadn’t asked for anything, who were only there because one day he decided to leave. At the end of the day, when no one else was left in the office, Julián stood in front of the bathroom mirror. He looked at himself as he hadn’t in a long time. Dark circles under his eyes, a long beard, a dull gaze—he didn’t recognize himself. He felt torn to shreds, and there alone, his mind a mess, he understood that he couldn’t keep playing both sides. Daniela was right about one thing: he had to make a decision. But what she didn’t
know was that, even though it would cost him everything, he had already chosen a side. He just needed the courage to say it out loud. After Daniela’s threat, Julián felt trapped. It was as if he suddenly lost control of his own life. At his company, he had to act as if nothing was happening, as if everything were in order, as if his world wasn’t crumbling around him. But when he was with Valeria and the children, everything was different. There, he wasn’t the CIO, the businessman, the guy who had to make cold, hard decisions. There, he was just Julián. And even though He felt
good, but he knew he couldn’t live like this for long. It was like walking on a thin wire, waiting for it to snap at any moment. The days slipped by in excuses. In the morning, he would arrive at the office and pretend to be focused. He would meet with clients, talk about numbers, sign papers, and sometimes have lunch with Daniela. She would treat him as if everything were on pause, but with that look that said she hadn’t forgotten a single word of the threat, every now and then she would throw out passive-aggressive comments, like when
she said casually, “Don’t be late today. You’re too old to be chasing after children.” He pretended to laugh, but inside he felt watched. In the afternoons, instead, he changed his demeanor. He’d call Valeria, and if she agreed, he’d pick up the children—not in the armored SUV, but in a simpler car, one that wouldn’t attract attention. Sometimes he’d take them to the park, or for ice cream, or to the movies—always simple things, but things that excited them as if it were Christmas. At first, Valeria wouldn’t stay; she’d let them go with him, but with
a thousand instructions: “Don’t give them candy after 6:00; the middle one gets carsick easily, so drive slowly; the little one doesn’t like being hugged suddenly.” Typical mom advice, which Julián knew all too well. He mentally noted them down as if they were sacred commandments and followed them to the letter. Over time, Valeria started staying for a little while. First, she’d only approach when the children returned, then she’d sit on the same bench while they played. Later, she agreed to go for coffee, and one afternoon, without planning it, the five of them ended up in a small

At a neighborhood pizzeria, laughing at something silly Leo said, it was the first time Valeria smiled without that burden she carried. Julián began to truly know his sons. Emiliano was the leader, the one who talked the most, the one who asked everything. Leo was quieter but very observant, and Mateo, the youngest, was the most tender, always seeking contact, the one who leaned on his shoulder without asking permission. One ordinary afternoon, in the middle of an impromptu picnic in a park, Julián was helping them inflate some balloons. Emiliano looked at him intently and blurted out, “You
‘re my dad.” Julián froze, holding the half-inflated balloon to his mouth. Valeria, who was a few steps away, turned around, her eyes wide. “Why do you say that?” she asked nervously. “Because he looks like us,” Emiliano replied, with the logic of a child who sees everything more clearly than adults. “He takes care of us, buys us things, and knows how to call us without confusing us. Dads do that.” Julián put down the balloon, crouched down to his level, and answered with all the calm he could muster, “Yes, Emiliano, I’m your dad.” The boy looked at him without saying anything else, then turned around, ran
to his brothers and shouted, “I know who it is!” Valeria approached him immediately. Julián thought she was going to scold him, that she was going to tell him he had crossed the line, but she only said in a low voice, “Are you sure you can handle this?” He looked at her straight in the eye. “I’m not sure about anything, but I’m not running away again.” That night, Julián returned to his apartment. Daniela wasn’t there; she had gone out to dinner with some business partners. He sat on the sofa, turned on the television without paying attention, and thought about everything he had experienced that day: the children’s laughter,
Valeria’s gaze, the way the youngest had taken his hand as they crossed the street, as if it were the most natural thing in the world. And he felt afraid because, however happy he felt there, he knew he had a ticking time bomb in the other half of his life. Daniela was waiting for a mistake, just one, and when that happened, she was going to press the button. She was going to destroy everything. But even knowing that, he couldn’t walk away, not now, not after hearing the word “Dad” for the first time, spoken with such innocence, not after seeing that family he never thought he’d have and that now he didn’t
want to lose for anything in the world. That Friday seemed like any other. Valeria was on her second shift at the cafeteria. The children got out of school at 4, and JuliĂĄn, as had become customary in recent weeks, had offered to pick them up. She accepted, no longer with doubts, no longer with fear. She was beginning to trust him, even if only a little. She saw how he looked after them, how he listened to them, how he knew them. JuliĂĄn left the office a little earlier. He was happy and had action figures in his backpack that he had bought for each of them. He planned to take them out for hamburgers and then see a movie.
He was watching a movie in his apartment, excited as if he were experiencing a part of his life he didn’t know existed, a part he liked more than any award ceremony or contract signing. As he was arriving at school, his cell phone rang. An unknown number answered without thinking, “Hello, is this Mr. JuliĂĄn Castañeda?” “Yes, this is he. We’re calling from Hospital Ángeles del Pedregal. One of the children in your care was brought in as an emergency. He’s in the ER.” JuliĂĄn’s heart sank. He didn’t know if he screamed or just thought he did. His heart raced as if he’d run a marathon. He hung up
without another word, shifted into first gear, and sped off. On the way, he called Valeria twice, nothing. The third time, nothing. He texted her on WhatsApp: “Leo had an accident. I’m going to the hospital. I’ll let you know as soon as I know something.” When he arrived, he didn’t park. He left the truck badly parked in the driveway, threw the keys to the floor, and ran inside. He asked for the child’s full name. They sent him straight to the ER. A doctor came out a few minutes later. “Are you the father?” Julián hesitated for a second, just one, then said, “Yes, I’m the father.” The boy had a hard fall, hit his head, and lost
consciousness. We did a CT scan; there’s no fracture, but we’re going to keep him under observation. He has a minor contusion. He’s stable, but we have to keep an eye on him. I can see him for a few minutes. They took him to a stretcher where Leo was sleeping with an IV in his arm and a bandage on his forehead. He looked small and fragile, nothing like the boy who ran and jumped all day. Julián sat next to him and held his hand. “I’m here, son. I’m not going anywhere. Everything’s going to be alright.” He didn’t cry, but his eyes were trembling. Twenty minutes passed, and Valeria came running in, pale and disheveled, still wearing her
work apron. She stormed into the room, pushed open the door without asking, and went straight to Leo. “What happened? What happened to him? He fell at recess,” Julián said softly. “They called me because he was on the emergency list. You weren’t answering.” Valeria took the boy’s face in her hands, spoke softly to him, kissed his hand and forehead, then turned to look at Julián. Her eyes were red. But she wasn’t crying. Thank you for coming. You’re welcome. I was nearby, going to get them. Did they tell you what happened? Yes, he tripped on the stairs, fell backward, was unconscious for a few minutes, but he’s okay,
they’re just going to keep an eye on him. She nodded, staring at her son, stroking his hair. Can I stay with him? he asked. Yes, I already spoke with the nurse. They’re going to give him a room in a little while. You can both stay, and you too, Julian. He looked at her calmly. I’ll stay too if you let me. Valeria didn’t say anything, but she didn’t kick him out, she didn’t ask him to leave, she just nodded as if something inside her didn’t want to fight anymore. Hours later, in the room already assigned, Leo woke up. The first thing he did was look at the two of them. Where am I? In the hospital, my love?
Valeria said with a nervous smile. Leo looked at Julián. “And you’re here too? Of course, I wasn’t going to leave without seeing you.” The boy smiled. “Did you bring me juice?” “Yes, and some dinosaurs.” “Then stay.” Valeria looked at him, and Julián, without saying a word, understood that he no longer had to ask permission. That night they took turns watching the boy; while one slept on the couch, the other sat by the bed. They didn’t talk much, but there were looks, gestures, silences that said more than words. The next morning, Valeria brought him coffee. “Thank you for not letting go.
Thank you for letting me stay. I’m not doing this out of gratitude; I’m doing it because I understand now that you’re not going anywhere.” She looked at him with a lump in her throat. “Then let’s do this right.” Daniela doesn’t forgive; she never has, and even less so when she feels ridiculed. For her, the fact that everyone knows her fiancĂ© has three children with another woman was the worst thing that could happen to her, not only because of pride but also because of power. In her world, respect is earned with control, with fear, with a perfect image, and Valeria, with her innocent face, her
simple clothes, and those children
 They didn’t ask to be born this way. She was taking all of that away from them without even trying. Daniela didn’t scream, didn’t make a scene. She just took a deep breath, smoothed her hair in front of the mirror, and said to Lucero, her assistant, “We’re going to make that woman disappear.
” Lucero looked at her carefully, like when you know you shouldn’t ask but you can’t stay silent either. “What do you mean by what I said? I want no one to ever hire her again. I want the city to see her as a danger, not a victim. But she hasn’t done anything. I don’t need her to have done anything; I just need it to look like she did.” The next day, Daniela moved as only she knew how. She had a network of contacts that covered digital media, light news portals, gossip accounts on social networks, and even a couple of crime reporters who owed her favors. And she began her operation. First, a small article on a
local page, headline: “Scandal at preschool: teacher hides her past and works with children without a current license,” accompanied by a blurry photo of Valeria entering her workplace with a backpack. Then came the comments on social media: anonymous people who said they had had problems with her, mothers who supposedly remembered her. From years ago, false stories mixed with half-truths were enough to sow doubt, enough to tarnish her reputation, and it worked. In less than three days, the director of the preschool where she worked called Valeria to her office: “We need to suspend you.”
“While we investigate the situation,” he said in an uncomfortable voice, “it’s not personal, but there is pressure from the parents; the school’s image is at stake.” Valeria didn’t understand anything. “What did I do? It’s not about what you did, it’s about what people think you did.” She left there with her heart in her throat, walking aimlessly. Her hands were sweating. Her cell phone rang. It was Julián. “Is everything okay?” he asked calmly. “I just got suspended from preschool.” “What? Why? I don’t know. They’re saying there’s a problem with my record, that there was an old complaint, that people are talking badly about me on
social media.” “What complaint? I don’t know, Julián. I don’t know what they’re talking about. I never did anything wrong.” He knew at that moment who was behind it. He didn’t need proof, he just felt it. Because if anyone could invent a scandal that fast, it was Daniela. He hung up and called Mateo. “I need you to investigate if anyone from Daniela’s team has been active in the media or leaked things quickly.” Meanwhile, Valeria arrived at the apartment. As soon as she crossed the threshold, she saw a camera pointed at her from the sidewalk across the street. It was a guy with a long lens, one of those guys who look for a scandalous photo to
sell. She slammed the door shut and peeked through the curtain. The guy was still there, waiting. She didn’t sleep that night. The children did, but she didn’t check her phone constantly. She read the messages she received, some supportive, many full of hate, from people she didn’t know saying horrible things to her, calls from strange numbers. One woman even insulted her loudly when she went to buy bread. Julián went to see her the next morning. She greeted him with a face that said she couldn’t take it anymore, dark circles under her eyes, her voice subdued. “I don’t want the children to go
through this. We’re going to solve this.” “How come they kicked me out of daycare? They told me they were going to check my background.” “What background? Having children alone is now a crime?” “You’re not alone, and we’re going to clear your name.” “What if there’s no way? What if I can’t go out in the street without being looked at like I’m a disgrace? No, they’re not going to grow up seeing their mother humiliated by a lie.” She looked at him, exhausted, but there was fire in her eyes. “It was Daniela, wasn’t it?” Julián didn’t answer. He didn’t need to. That afternoon, while the children played with Legos in the living room, Valeria sat
on the sofa, staring into space, and for the first time, she said aloud something she had kept inside for years: “I’m not going to let them destroy me again.” Not now, Julian didn’t realize the blow until it was already upon him. It all happened in a matter of days, as if someone had pulled a rope and suddenly everything crumbled. First, there was a call from a foreign investor, the usual thing, that they were worried about the public image, that they had read rumors that the company was experiencing personal instability.
At the management level, Julián tried to calm the waters, saying everything was under control, but it was too late; the seeds of doubt had been sown. Then came the emails. The main partner in one of his biggest projects canceled a deal they’d been preparing for months. He used pretty words to cover it up: internal restructuring, changes in focus, new opportunities. But Julián knew perfectly well what it meant: he was being left alone, and behind it all, most likely, was Daniela. She hadn’t dropped one bombshell; she’d dropped several, all at once.
She let public opinion judge him for his personal life. She leaked details of his absences, how he had prioritized personal interests in the middle of important negotiations. Someone—surely Lucero, his loyal assistant—even leaked a copy of one of his children’s birth certificates. The document went viral on a financial forum with the title “The Millionaire Who Forgot His Children.” The damage was done. Mateo, his assistant, came into his office one afternoon with a funeral-like expression. “Two more partners got out,” he told him, leaving the papers on the
desk, “and the bank didn’t renew the line of credit.” “Do you think your reputation affects Julián’s brand value?” “No.” He just stared at everything with dry eyes. He couldn’t get angry anymore, he wasn’t even surprised anymore. It was as if he were watching from the outside, as if all this was happening to someone else. That same afternoon, he received a message from Daniela, just three words: “I warned you.” And then he understood that there was no way to continue in that world, not like this, not with her lurking, not with that hell on top of him. He understood that everything he had built could
disappear, but what he was building with Valeria and the children, that was worth it, that was what made sense. That night, while the children slept and Valeria washed the dishes in her apartment, he sat next to her, not in his usual suit, not with his cell phone glued to his hand. He sat with a different expression, more tired, more human. “I lost everything,” he said bluntly. Valeria put the dishcloth down in the sink and looked at him without saying anything. Daniela had made good on her threat. “They took me off projects, canceled contracts, I’m out of the council, they erased me.” “And now what are you going to do?” “I don’t
know, but I want to do it with you.” She didn’t say anything, she just stared at him. “I don’t want to live dividing myself between two lives anymore. I don’t want to anymore.” I don’t want to hide anymore, I don’t want to be silent. Valeria sighed, approached, and sat beside him. I can’t promise you that everything will be alright, nor can I, but I can promise you that I won’t leave, even if we’re starting from scratch, even if I have to start from the bottom. You from the bottom, Mr. Suit Caro. Julián laughed for the first time in days. I don’t have any suits left, I put them all away. And what are you going to do? I’m going to sell my share in
The company will get us through a while with that. We’ll see later. I’m tired of living to please others. Valeria looked at him, still afraid, but also with something new in her eyes: respect. “Would you really do that?” “I already am.” Valeria lowered her gaze, and right there in that small kitchen, without cheesy promises or soap opera hugs, she took his hand. “So stay, but this time for real.” The next day, Julián went to his old office just to sign his departure papers. He didn’t make a scene, didn’t give a speech,
didn’t ask for applause. He just went in, signed, gathered a couple of personal things: a photo of his dad, an old mug with his name on it, and a notebook, and walked out. Daniela didn’t appear, didn’t face him, but he knew she was watching everything from Minuno, her office. She surely felt like a winner, and maybe she was. In that world, in that game, she did win, but Julián didn’t want to play anymore. He got in his car, put on music for the first time in weeks, and for the first time in a long time, he didn’t feel like his heart was in pieces. He felt fear, yes, but also relief
because now he was free to live the life he truly wanted. Because at that moment, as he crossed the ring road with the sun setting, he knew his true story was just beginning. The apartment was small, with light-colored walls and used furniture, but it had something Julián hadn’t felt in years: peace. Not the boring peace, nor the kind you fake so others won’t ask questions; it was something else entirely. It was the noise of three children running down the hall in crooked socks, the smell of breakfast burning while everyone complained, and the
beautiful chaos of a real family. Since leaving his company and selling his shares, JuliĂĄn had changed completely. The first thing he did was buy an old car, one of those that still had a stereo with buttons and manual windows. The second was to stop watching financial news and checking his work email. He turned off everything from his old life like someone closing a door without looking back. Now he got up every day at 6 a.m., not for a meeting or an international flight, but because the children had to be ready for school. One took
forever to get dressed, another hid his shoes, and the youngest always lost his lunchbox. Everything was
 It was a bit of a mess, but he loved it. At first, Valeria looked at him with a raised eyebrow, as if wondering if it was all for real or if he was going to give up at any moment. But the days went by, and Julián was still there, making the coffee, sweeping the living room, carrying backpacks, helping with homework—sometimes badly, sometimes clumsily, but always with enthusiasm, and that’s what he told her most. One day, while they were taking the clothes off the line, Valeria looked at him

Out of the corner of her eye, “Don’t you miss your old life?” “Which one? The one with expensive dinners and tight ties?” “Yes, not that one. Honestly, I’ve never slept so peacefully, even though one of them woke up at 3 in the morning because he dreamed about monsters, and the other accidentally kicked me in the back.” Valeria chuckled softly. It was a laugh she hadn’t let out in a long time, one of those unplanned laughs that have no filter. Julián stared at her for a second longer than he should have. She noticed, but didn’t look away; she just lowered her gaze with a shy smile. “So, what are you going to do now?”
he asked while folding a t-shirt. “I’m not sure. I have some money saved, but I don’t want to go back to the same old thing. I was thinking of starting something small, my own business, maybe a coffee shop, something quiet.” “You in a coffee shop?” “Yes, I even know how to make French press coffee. Mateo taught me.” Valeria looked at him in surprise. Mateo, the assistant in the suit and glasses, is now the owner of a sandwich food truck. “He told me he’s doing well.” “And you would give up millions for that?” “I already gave them up that day for the first time.” The five of them ate together at the dining room table without haste or
interruptions. Julian sat in the middle of the three children, cutting their chicken, serving water, and cleaning the sauce off the tablecloth without complaining. He looked tired but happy, as if he were finally in his rightful place. Later, while they played with colored blocks, Mateo, the youngest, climbed onto his lap and asked him point-blank, “Dad, can you come to the open class tomorrow?” Julian looked at him as if he had just received the greatest prize in the world. Open class, yes, it’s a day where the dads can come and watch us dance and recite poems. There will be cookies,
of course I’ll be there. Valeria heard from the kitchen. She didn’t say anything, but her chest tightened, not from sadness, but from emotion. It was the first time one of the children had called him Dad so naturally, without hesitation, without thinking if it was right or wrong. That night, Julian washed the dishes, swept the living room, and then stayed watching television with Valeria. Nothing special, just a game show with long commercials, but they felt comfortable, unhurried, without awkward silences. “Do you know what the hardest part is?” Julian said, half asleep.
“Not shouting to the world that this is the life I always wanted.” She looked at him without answering, turned off the TV, and stayed there beside him in silence. But it wasn’t that silence full of distance anymore; it was one that said, “I’m here too.” Things finally felt stable; the rhythm at home was no longer chaotic, it was a routine, the kind that’s tiring, yes, but also brings peace. The children no longer asked strange questions, they no longer got confused. Valeria and Julián had learned to move together, to trust each other, to give each other space. They had even gone to the kindergarten open class, and Julián
She ended up crying while Mateo recited a poorly memorized poem that ended in laughter. Everything was going well until Daniela returned. The first sign was a letter; it arrived in a white envelope with no return address. Valeria found it in the mailbox one afternoon while returning from the stationery store with the children. She opened it without thinking much; it was an official document, a court order. It was signed, sealed, a summons. The case of fraud involving altered documents, archived four years earlier, had been reopened, and she, Valeria Ortega, had to appear as the accused. She felt like the street had been erased from her mind,
her hands went numb. She called Julián from her cell phone with the children shouting around her. He arrived in less than 20 minutes, and upon reading the paper, he understood everything. They didn’t need evidence, they didn’t need to investigate. This scheme had a name: Daniela. “Has this happened to you before?” Julián asked, his voice tense. “Yes,” Valeria replied, looking at the ground, “years ago, when I worked in a small paperwork office, the boss asked me to sign some papers. I trusted him, I didn’t ask questions. I was pregnant; I needed the job. Then he disappeared, and they
pointed the finger at me. I defended myself, I cried.” I explained everything, and in the end, there was no evidence. The case was closed, but it was still there, a stain on my memory, and now they’ve brought it up again. Yes, she was there. Julián gripped the steering wheel tightly. He knew Daniela was capable of dirty tricks, but this was a whole different ballgame. She wasn’t just angry; she was determined to destroy, and this time it wasn’t him he was targeting, Valeria. A few days later, rumors started circulating at the children’s school. Some mothers began whispering things. One even said to her face, “They say you were in trouble
with the law. How awful that this is affecting the children, isn’t it?” Valeria didn’t respond. She swallowed her anger and left with her head held high, but inside she was shattered. Julián started to make moves. Although he no longer had the power he once did, he still had connections. He called a lawyer who had been his client. I read and explained everything. The lawyer reviewed the case and told him the truth: this smells like revenge. But the judge agreed to reopen it because someone presented new evidence—someone powerful pushed him. If we don’t stop this, it’s going to escalate, and if we get to the bottom of it, if we prove
that evidence is false
 You can do it, but it will take time, and in the meantime, she remains guilty even though she isn’t. Valeria listened to everything in silence; each word weighed on her as if stones were hanging from her chest. At night, when the children were asleep, they sat in the kitchen facing each other. The light was dim; they didn’t speak loudly, as if they didn’t want to wake either the children or the hope that still remained. “I don’t want them to go through this,” Valeria said in a low voice. “Neither do I, but I don’t intend to leave you alone. And if
”
If I lose, then we lose together. I don’t want you to lose again. You already gave everything for me, and you didn’t give everything for them, for me too, without knowing it. You’re not alone in this, Valeria. She looked at him with fear, real fear, not of the case, not of the trial, but of the people, of life, of those who don’t forgive a woman who made the mistake of trusting. Julián stood up, went to the children’s room and watched them sleep. Then he came back to her and took her hand. If she wants to play dirty, let’s play too, but with the truth. This time I’m not going to
hide, I’m going to face the music. She squeezed his hand and for the first time since receiving that letter, she didn’t feel like she was sinking alone. The courthouse smelled of nerves, cheap coffee, old files, people coming and going with tired faces. There were no cameras or flashes, but for Valeria, that place was harder than any news report. It was the place where they were going to point the finger at her again, where she would have to explain herself, defend herself again, and this time with the eyes of the past, the present, and all of Mexico upon her. Julián had been with her since Early that morning, he squeezed her hand on the
wooden bench where they waited for their turn to enter. Beside her, the lawyer they had hired reviewed papers, talked on the phone, and read the file over and over as if something were about to magically change. Valeria said nothing, only stared at the floor, not out of fear of the courtroom, but because of what it meant. Now, not only were her name, her reputation, and her freedom at stake, but also the stability of her children, that peace they had barely begun to build. “List,” Julián said quietly. She nodded. She
wasn’t ready, but she had to say yes. They entered. The courtroom was simple: a judge in the center, a secretary to one side, two chairs in front, the rest pews like in a church. Everything felt cold and harsh. When they called her full name, Valeria stood up and walked to the front. The judge asked her to state her occupation. She did so with a firm voice, though inside she felt her legs buckling. “Have you ever falsified legal documents?” the prosecutor asked directly, without beating around the bush. “You didn’t sign papers without
reading them? I trusted my boss. He told me it was routine. And if that paper had false information, didn’t you know?” The prosecutor, believing she was responsible, didn’t know it was false. He smiled as if he already had his answer. Ignorance doesn’t make you innocent, Miss Ortega. Julián gritted his teeth. He wanted to stand up, to shout, but he couldn’t; it wasn’t his place for now. The defense attorney presented evidence, saying the case had already been closed once for lack of evidence, that reopening it with almost identical documents made no sense, but the judge allowed it to continue. There was a new
A statement from someone claiming that Valeria had consciously participated, an anonymous witness, according to what they said, raised the tension. Valeria looked at JuliĂĄn; he responded with a look that said, “Trust me.” Outside on the street, the story had already spread. A gossip account published the news that morning: former teacher accused of fraud, mother of Miron, the children of former businessman JuliĂĄn Castañeda. The old photos recirculated: her face, the children’s, JuliĂĄn’s, all mixed together in publications full of judgment, hatred, and
very few real facts. Mateo, now a friend and almost brother of Julián, was the one who brought the surprise that day. He arrived halfway through the trial with a folder under his arm and a look that said, “I have something.” He handed it to the lawyer, who read it with wide eyes. He asked the judge to speak: “Your Honor, I have a sworn statement from Ernesto Palacios, the defendant’s former boss, who signed this document confessing that he forced Valeria Ortega to sign altered documents to absolve herself of responsibility. He also acknowledges that he fled the country with the money collected and
that I quote
” She literally had no knowledge of anything I did. The prosecutor tried to object, but the judge stopped him. “Where is this Mr. Palacios in Canada?” he asked. “But he sent the official notarized document. He also sent a video call, ready to testify live.” The judge thought for a few seconds and accepted. On the screen appeared a man of about 50 with a beard and a tired face, Ernesto Palacios. With a firm voice but without showing guilt, he said, “I set everything up. I was going to lose my business. I forged documents to cover up mistakes. Valeria had no idea; she just
signed what I told her to.” The judge called for a recess. In the hallway, Valeria burst into tears, not like a victim, but like someone who has lifted a weight from their shoulders. Julián hugged her without saying anything. Finally, after all, someone was telling the truth for her, even if it was late, even if no one remembered the harm they had done to her. An hour later, they went back in. The judge asked for silence and spoke bluntly: “Due to a lack of new valid evidence and with the confession received, the case is definitively closed. Valeria Ortega is free of
all charges.” There was no applause or There were no hugs, just a long, heavy silence, but for them, that silence was the most beautiful thing they had heard in a long time. The days after the trial felt strange, not bad, not good, just strange, like when it rains a lot and suddenly the sun comes out, but everything is still wet. People weren’t talking about the scandal as much anymore; social media had become distracted by other gossip, and Valeria’s name began to slowly disappear from searches. What seemed impossible happened: the storm calmed, and she smiled again, even though
She still struggled on the street; she walked with a steady gaze, but every time someone stared at her, her stomach trembled, not because she was afraid of being accused again, but because of everything she had had to carry alone for so long—years of enduring stares, accusations, rejection, all for a mistake that wasn’t hers. Julián, for his part, took it upon himself to put everything back in order at home: the routine with the children, the chores, the walks in the park. Although he also felt that something was about to happen, he didn’t know what, but he felt it, like that feeling you get
when everything is too quiet. And it was. One Tuesday afternoon, when they returned from dropping the children off at school, they found an envelope under the apartment door. It had no return address; it only said, “For Julián. It’s urgent.” Valeria looked at it suspiciously. “Let’s open it.” “Yes,” said Julián, although he already had a strange feeling in his chest. He opened it. Inside was a handwritten letter and a photo. The letter said, “You thought the past wouldn’t catch up with you, but sometimes it comes back in ways you don’t expect.
This child is also yours.” The photo showed a child of about Six years sitting on a park bench, same hair, same face, same mole on the eyebrow that Julián had seen on his own children. It was like looking at another version of himself in the mirror. Julián was speechless. He didn’t understand. He couldn’t speak. “What is this?” Valeria asked, holding the letter. “Is this a joke?” “I don’t know,” he replied, his voice breaking. “Do you recognize someone? I’ve never seen him, I swear.” She looked at him, trying to read his face. Julián could only stare at the photo. His legs were
trembling. He sat down. “And what does this mean? Could it be true?” he said, barely breathing. “Back then, before I left, I dated someone for a short time. It was a disaster. It wasn’t even serious. Once, maybe twice. I left shortly after. I never heard from her again.” Valeria pressed her lips together. “And if it’s true, then I have four children, not three.” Silence enveloped them. Valeria paced the living room like a caged lioness. Julián remained seated, motionless, the open letter on his lap. “Who could send this like this without saying anything else? Why now? I don’t
know, but Daniela didn’t do this. This is something else. That night
” Julián didn’t sleep. He searched through old papers, photos, and emails for any clue. He was left with one name: that of a woman he had briefly dated before leaving for Monterrey. Her name was Sara; she was discreet and serious. He never had contact with her again, but now he couldn’t get that face out of his head, nor the boy’s. The next day, he went to talk to Mateo and showed him the letter. Mateo didn’t ask anything; he just said, “We’re going to find her, and if it’s true, then you have another story.”
Valeria supported him, she didn’t scold him, she didn’t judge him, she just asked him that if he was going to get involved in this, he should do it right, that he shouldn’t leave any loose ends, that he shouldn’t repeat the mistakes of the past. Julián looked at the boy’s photo again. He had big eyes with a gaze that said much more than any letter could explain, and there, with that photo in his hand, he understood that the past never closes, only that there’s always something more, and this time he was ready to face whatever came. Only three days had passed since the letter arrived, but to Julián it felt like weeks. He wasn’t eating well, he wasn’t
sleeping, he couldn’t concentrate. He carried the boy’s photo in his pocket all the time, as if carrying it would help him understand something or at least keep him calm. He didn’t know if he was about to start a new chapter or lose what little he had just built. Mateo, as always, was the one who helped him. He found the name, the address, and even a contact number. The woman lived in QuerĂ©taro. Sara Delgado had worked at a logistics company where JuliĂĄn had given consulting services years before. None other than Valeria
told him to go, no drama. No complaints, just one thing: do it right. And he did. He left in his old car, his stomach churning and his head full of thoughts. All the way he thought about the children, about Valeria, about the possibility of having another child, one he didn’t know, one he never asked to be born. So it came to him on a Friday afternoon. He hesitated to knock. It was a simple building, one of those where the echo bounces and everyone knows who comes up. When he knocked, a woman opened the door without surprise, as if she knew it would happen someday. “I knew you’d come,” she said, dryly and
directly. “Is the envelope yours?” “Yes.” “Why now?” Sara let him in without answering. The apartment was small and clean, with toys scattered across the linen floor. At the back, a half-open door revealed a boy watching cartoons. It was him, the one in the photo. His name is Iván, he’s six years old, born four months after you left. I never told you because you left too, without saying a word. I didn’t know you were pregnant; I wasn’t when you left. I found out later, and I didn’t look for you because it was pointless. You were already in another world. And why now? Sara looked him straight in the eye.
Why is he asking? Because he looks so much like you that I couldn’t play dumb anymore. Because even though you’re not here, your face is there every day, and because I want you to know that you have a son. Julián was speechless. His hands trembled, his heart ached. “Can I talk to him?” Sara hesitated, then nodded. She called him in a soft tone. Ivan came out of the room with a doll in his hand. He looked at Julian as if he recognized him without knowing where from. “Hello,” said the boy. “Hello, champ,” replied Julian, swallowing hard. “My name is Julian. You’re the one who sent me the
”
“Not Legos, but if you want I can do it.” Iván smiled, then fell silent, looking at him with those same eyes he already knew. He was just like the others, but also different; he had something more reserved, more tranquil. Julián crouched down to be at his level. “Do you like cartoons?” “Yes.” “And dinosaurs?” “Me too.” Iván didn’t ask who he was, not at that moment. He just approached and gave him the doll he was holding. “It’s called Tomás. You can play with it if you want.” Julián took it carefully; his fingers trembled. After a while, Sara took him to take a nap.
Julián stayed on the couch in silence. Sara returned and sat down in front of him. “I don’t want your money, I don’t want problems, I just want you to meet him if you want. If not, I’ll manage. I want to meet him.” “Are you sure?” “Yes, I just need time.” “Not for him, to tell the others.” He returned home that night, not knowing how to start the conversation. Valeria received him without asking questions, waiting for him to speak. “It’s true,” he said. “He’s my son after all, and his mother isn’t going to ask me for anything. She doesn’t want to fight; she just wants me to meet him.” His name is Iván. Valeria nodded, taking a moment to
answer. “You’re going to be in his life?” “Yes.” “Then we’ll be in his too.” “Are you sure?” “No, but I don’t want to be the one who closes the door anymore.” The children didn’t know immediately; it was little by little. First, they showed them the photo, then they told them the story as if it were part of a movie, like something that happens, that sometimes adults do things wrong but can also try to do them right. A month later, Iván met his brothers. They stared at him as if they were seeing themselves for the first time and didn’t say anything strange. There was no drama, no jealousy,
just a simple question from Emiliano: “Do you want to play?” Iván smiled. “Yes.” And that’s how the past, with all its complications and pain, blended with the present, without magic fixes, without movie-like happy endings, but with truth and a desire to do things right. The rest they were writing together, day by day.