“Your mother wanted to leave with you, Mariana.”
“Leave?”
“The night of the accident, she was on her way to Querétaro, with Lucía. Fernando had told her that he planned to send you to a boarding school in Canada so he wouldn’t have to see you in the house anymore.”
I felt the floor disappear beneath me.
“My mother died while running away?”
Don Ernesto lowered his eyes.
“She died trying to save you.”
That was the second blow. My mother hadn’t just loved me. She had given her last night for me. That is why, on Father’s Day, when Fernando called me a failure, it no longer broke me. It only confirmed who he was. I put the DNA test, the adoption certificate, a copy of the land agreement, and a letter from me inside the envelope. I didn’t insult him. I only wrote: “I already know that I am not your biological daughter. I already know that you adopted me for business. I don’t want your inheritance. I don’t want your surname as a chain. I only wanted you to know that I am no longer going to beg for love where there was only contempt.” When I left the mansion, I didn’t run. I walked slowly to my Honda. I heard my name behind me, but I didn’t turn around. I found out later what happened. Fernando opened the envelope in front of everyone. First he saw the DNA test. Then the certificate. Then the agreement. Graciela, nervous, read the worst part out loud.
“0.00%? Fernando… Mariana isn’t your daughter?”
50 guests heard it. A journalist raised his camera. My aunt-in-law Carmen stood up.
“You humiliated her her entire life knowing she was an adopted child?”
Fernando shouted:
“This is private!”
And Carmen answered:
“You called her a failure in public. Now the truth will be public too.”
Then Renata did something I never expected. She stood up crying.