Mateo was barely eight years old. She was wearing a blue sweater, the same color my mom said looked pretty on her because it highlighted her eyes. He hadn’t spoken much since we left the motel. He tightened his sleeves as if they were the only thing keeping him whole.
When we entered the guest room, my mother was already there.
Thinner.
Paler.
With handcuffed hands.
But his eyes remained the same.
“My girl”, he told me.
I wanted to run towards her, but my legs didn’t obey me.
She looked at Mateo and knelt as best she could, although the chains barely let her move.
“Forgive me for not seeing you grow”, he whispered.
Mateo threw himself into her arms.
My mom closed her eyes and pressed it against her chest.
Then he said something so softly that at first I thought I had imagined it.
“Mom… I know who hid the knife under your bed.”
Everything stopped.
My mom stiffened.
A guard took a step towards us.
“What did you say, child?”
Mateo started to cry.
“I saw him that night. It wasn’t my mom.”
The prison director immediately raised his hand.
“Stop the procedure.”
There was someone else in the room.
My uncle Ruben.
He had gone, according to him, “to say goodbye to his sister-in-law”.
But as soon as Mateo spoke, his face lost all color.
He took a step back.
Then another.
Mateo raised his hand trembling and pointed at him.
“Was he. And he told me that if I spoke, Sofía was also going to disappear.”
My heart stopped beating for a second.
Because in that moment, memories that I had buried began to return like knives.
Rubén was the one who found the weapon.
Rubén was the one who called the police.
Rubén was the one who insisted that my mother was guilty.
And now, in front of everyone, he was trying to get to the door.
“Don’t pay attention to him”, he said, his voice breaking. “Was a child. He’s confused.”
But Mateo shook his head, put his hand in his pocket and took out a small plastic bag.
Inside was an old brass key.
“Dad told me that if mom was in danger, to open the secret closet drawer.”
My uncle Rubén stopped breathing.
And I understood that the worst was not what Mateo had just said.
The worst thing was that we were just beginning to find out.
PART 2
My mother’s execution was not cancelled.
Was suspended.
That word, “suspended”, stuck in my throat. It didn’t mean freedom. It didn’t mean justice. It meant my mom had a few more hours to stay alive while others decided if the truth was worth hearing.
The director ordered that no one leave the building. Rubén was seated in a separate office. He kept repeating the same thing:
“That child doesn’t know what he’s saying.”
But Mateo did know.
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