I looked down at the copied page, at the familiar slanted handwriting I had known since childhood.
“If he won’t look at me,” I read, “then I’ll make sure he never gets her.”
No one moved.
I lifted my eyes. “That was written by my sister when she was nineteen, right after she intercepted Diego’s letter and kept it from me.”
Valentina’s mouth opened, but nothing came out. My aunt Elena sat down so abruptly that her chair scraped the stone. Diego’s mother pressed a hand to her chest. One of my cousins, Lara, who had known more than most, simply closed her eyes, as if a suspicion she had carried for years had finally become too visible to bear.
“That still doesn’t prove anything,” Valentina snapped at last, but the force had gone out of her voice. “I was young. I was stupid. I loved him.”
“No,” I said. “You wanted what I had. There’s a difference.”
I could have stopped there. That alone was enough to crack the image she had built. But the old letter was only the beginning of the truth.
“One week before this wedding,” I said, “Martín came to see me.”
That drew the sharpest reaction yet. My mother looked up in confusion. My father swore under his breath. Valentina went white.