That afternoon, Julián hugged his daughter in silence. He didn’t ask why she lied. He already understood. Valeria had been protecting the only thing she still had.
The following days were a different kind of battle. Julián went to child services, the bank, the police station, the school. He gathered legal help and began a process to prove the fraud. It wasn’t fast or easy, but for the first time, the house had an adult fighting for it.
Little by little, life began to move again. Valeria started sleeping an extra hour. Mateo stopped hiding bread under his pillow. Bruno gained weight. The house was still humble, but no longer abandoned.
Then one Friday afternoon, while Julián was fixing the gate, a black truck parked in front of the house.
Valeria dropped the broom. Mateo ran behind Bruno.
Fernanda stepped out. Sunglasses, styled nails, expensive bag. And she wasn’t alone. Iván stood beside her, smiling as if he owned the street. Behind them, a woman held a folder.
Fernanda removed her sunglasses.
—I’ve come for my children. And if you don’t give them to me, I’ll prove you are an unstable and violent father.
Julián didn’t respond. Because at that moment Valeria went pale and whispered something no one expected:
—Dad… she didn’t come for us. She came for the money she still couldn’t collect.
PART 3
The woman with the folder turned out to be a lawyer. Fernanda claimed she had returned because “a mother always comes back for her children.” Iván stood behind her, arms crossed.
—You were absent for two years —Fernanda said—. I can say you abandoned them.
Valeria clenched her fists.
—No, Mom. You abandoned us. You said Mateo and I were a burden.
Fernanda snapped:
—Be quiet, Valeria. You don’t understand adult matters.
But Julián raised his hand.
—Let her speak.
The girl ran to her room and returned with a shoebox. Inside were receipts, notes, printed screenshots, and a broken phone.
—I kept everything —Valeria said—. Because I thought one day Dad would come back and no one would believe me.
Inside were audio recordings of Fernanda saying: “Don’t tell your father, he would be ashamed.” In another: “Take care of your brother. I’ve done enough for you.”