Then Diego saw her hand.
On her left ring finger rested a silver ring. Simple at first glance, but unmistakably crafted by someone who cared. The metal was etched, not mass-produced. At its center, a pale blue topaz caught the gray light of the storm and scattered it softly.
Diego’s breath stopped—not dramatically, not suddenly—but as if his lungs had simply forgotten what to do.
He knew that ring.
He had designed it himself sixteen years ago, sitting in a tiny workshop with a jeweler who charged too much and talked too little. He had insisted on the stone. Insisted on the engraving hidden inside, invisible unless you knew to look.
D & X. Forever.
He had slipped that ring onto Ximena’s finger the night before she disappeared.
She had been three months pregnant.
She left a letter. One he could recite without effort. One that lived in his bones.
Diego swallowed.
The girl clutched the basket tighter.
“Cecilia… sir,” she said softly.
The sound of the name landed like a blow.
Cecilia.
Ximena had said it a hundred times. If it’s a girl, she’d said, Cecilia—after my grandmother. Soft, strong, unbreakable.
Diego didn’t think. He reached into his pocket, pulled out cash, and bought the entire basket. He paid far more than necessary, added another bill without looking.
Cecilia’s eyes widened.
“No, sir… it’s too much.”
“It’s not,” he said gently. “And if you or your mother ever need anything—anything at all—call me.”
She took it carefully, as if it might dissolve in her wet fingers.
Rain ran down Diego’s face—water indistinguishable from something else now. He stood there as she walked away, barefoot against the flooded stone, disappearing into the curtain of rain.
His body screamed at him to follow her.
To grab her hand.
To turn the ring, to check the engraving.
To ask where her mother was.
To say the words he had carried silently for sixteen years:
I’m your father.
But he didn’t.
He stood still, heart shaking, letting the storm soak him to the bone, because some truths—when found too suddenly—must be held gently, or they shatter.
Behind him, the traffic light turned green.
Diego didn’t move.
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