Author: Elodie

PART 1 The icy November wind blew mercilessly through the cobblestone streets of Guanajuato, cutting Elena’s skin like knives. Before her stood “La Espiga de Oro,” the city’s most prestigious and traditional bakery. Through the enormous glass window, the warmth of the oven and the sweet aroma of freshly baked conchas, cinnamon, and hot chocolate seemed a cruel mockery of her reality. Elena clutched her two-year-old twins to her chest; they were shivering, wrapped in a worn shawl. Beside her, her eldest son, Mateo, barely eight years old, clutched her skirt with his hands, dirty from the dust of the…

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PART 1 The clock struck almost 8 p.m. when Lucía stepped off the minibus, feeling the crushing weight of her 12-hour shift at the General Hospital of Mexico City. Her feet were swollen, her white uniform completely wrinkled, and she had a huge lump of guilt in her throat for not having been able to accompany her 11-year-old daughter, Sofía, to her cousin Valeria’s big 12th birthday party. That morning, before leaving for work, Sofia radiated a magical light. She had gotten up very early to get ready meticulously. Her hair was her greatest treasure: a cascade of long, chestnut-brown,…

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Mara told her everything. She described Roman’s dark coat, the scar that carved through his jawline, the cold steel of his eyes, and the man standing behind him—the one whose hand had slipped inside his jacket like he was prepared for violence at any moment. Evelyn’s spoon paused for the briefest fraction of a second above her soup. “Did the man touch you?” “No.” “Did he say his name?” “No.” “Did he look at your bracelet?” Mara turned slowly from the sink, water dripping from her fingertips. “Why?” Evelyn’s smile appeared too quickly, too polished. “Because it’s pretty, baby. People…

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The first thing I noticed wasn’t the silence—it was the way my daughter’s hands wouldn’t stop shaking, the way her tiny fingers clutched that unicorn suitcase like it was the only thing keeping her from falling apart, and in that moment, standing under the dim porch light with the cold pressing in around us. I realized with a kind of dread that settles deep in your bones that whatever she was about to say next was going to change everything I thought I knew about my home, my life, and the woman I had trusted more than anyone else in…

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All the other parents were grabbing their kids. Mothers called out sharp, nervous warnings from across the playground. Fathers subtly stepped closer to the monkey bars and swings, positioning themselves like human shields. Conversations quieted into uneasy whispers. But my daughter, Emma, was walking straight toward him. He was impossible not to notice. A massive man—at least six-foot-four—with shoulders so broad they seemed to block out the sunlight behind him. His thick dark beard was unkempt, his muscular arms covered in faded tattoos that disappeared beneath the sleeves of a weathered leather vest stretched tightly across his chest. Heavy black…

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For one impossible, breathless second, I truly believed I was still dreaming. The world felt wrong. Tilted. Unreal. Lily stood in the farmhouse doorway, only eight years old, barefoot and trembling so hard her thin shoulders shook beneath her yellow nightdress. The hem was soaked dark from the wet grass outside, mud streaking her small ankles. And clutched against her narrow chest was a tiny bundle wrapped in a filthy white blanket. “Mom,” she gasped, tears pouring down her cheeks, “I found a baby near the barn.” Everything inside me stopped. The walls. The clock. My heartbeat. The entire world…

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PART 1 For 23 days, the most expensive kitchen in the most imposing mansion in San Pedro Garza García remained in a de:athly silence. It was a kitchen worth millions. State-of-the-art industrial stoves, smart refrigerators, imported marble that shone like a mirror, and silver utensils. Everything was absolutely perfect in that place. Everything, that is, except one thing: life. Every day, from sunrise, dishes fit for royalty were prepared. Nutritious soups made with exotic ingredients, special smoothies prescribed by international nutritionists, meals designed by chefs who were paid in dollars by the hour. And every day, without exception, those dishes…

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María Herrera knew the sound of five o’clock silence better than anyone. While the rest of Madrid slept under a blanket of darkness, she was already up in her small kitchen on the outskirts of town, preparing a strong coffee to ward off her weariness. Her routine was a sacred ritual, not out of devotion to her work, but out of love for someone who wasn’t even her own flesh and bl00d. Two buses. That was all that separated her from her humble world and the imposing Ortega mansion in La Moraleja, a place where luxury screamed from the marble…

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The wall clock read 6:00 a.m. when the heavy metal door of cell block D slowly creaked open. Five long years. Five years of shouting his innocence to cold, unfeeling concrete walls. Now, with only hours left before his final walk, Mateo Vargas had just one request. “I need to see my daughter,” he said, his voice hoarse and breaking. “That’s all I’m asking. Let me see little Elena before it’s over.” The younger guard shifted awkwardly and looked away. The older officer snorted and spat on the floor. “Prisoners don’t make demands.” “She’s only eight,” Mateo continued quietly. “I…

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PART 1 The exclusive Polanco restaurant was at its most elegant. Golden lights reflected off the crystal glasses, and the soft murmur of conversation created the perfect ambiance for another luxurious Friday in Mexico City. But Camila knew that this peace was about to be shattered. She adjusted her apron for the tenth time and glanced at the clock on the wall. It was 7:45 p.m. In exactly 15 minutes, the Garza family would arrive for their weekly dinner, bringing with them the chaos that all the employees knew by heart. —Camila, are you in charge of table 12 today?…

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