That sentence healed something in me.
A year later, I became director of a foundation called Casa Raíz, created to help young people leaving foster care with scholarships, housing, legal support, therapy, and dignified work. I did not want another girl like me to mistake a cage for a home just because someone wrapped it in luxury.
Then a letter arrived from prison.
Hector wrote that he had made mistakes, that there had been love, that Mateo was his son, that I should not let my mother turn me cruel.
For a moment, the abandoned child in me wanted to feel guilty.
Then I looked at Mateo laughing on the rug with wooden blocks.
I folded the letter and fed it into the shredder.
After that, I signed the papers authorizing Grupo Aranda to buy Luján Logística’s debt. The company Hector had tried to save by stealing from me would now belong to the family he tried to destroy.
I signed my full name:
Mariana Aranda Salcedo.
Not for revenge.
For justice.
That afternoon, I stood with Mateo in the rooftop garden while Mexico City stretched below us. Catalina placed a blanket over my shoulders.
“Are you okay?” she asked.
I looked at my son, then at my mother.
“I’m learning.”
Hector thought he had married a helpless orphan.
In truth, he had married the long-lost heir to an empire.
And empires do not beg to survive.
They rise.