I saw with my own eyes my mother-in-law, Carmen, throw away my baby’s blanket, Emiliano.
As if it were an old rag.
At that moment, I knew it wasn’t just any gesture.
I had been looking for her all over the house for weeks. Closets. Drawers. Clothes bags. My husband’s car. Even the folding crib in the storage room. Nothing.
That blanket wasn’t expensive. Not elegant. Not new.
But he covered Emiliano the first night he returned from the hospital.
For me, it had enormous sentimental value.
For Carmen… it was garbage.
I did not say anything. I waited for him to leave. I went out after the container. I found her.
Inside a black bag. Perfect fold. Like someone wanted to make sure no one saw her.
I took her home. Absolute silence. Nobody should have known. Not Alexander.
During the journey, I felt ashamed. And rage.
Shame on rummaging through the trash.
Anger because I sensed… something much worse hidden there.
I arrived at my apartment in Mexico City. I locked it. Emiliano slept.
I spread the blanket over the bed. I ran my hand over the fabric.
Then I felt it. Something hard. Elongated. Sewn between the lining and the outer fabric.
It wasn’t a label. It wasn’t a patch.
It was something hidden.
I ran to the kitchen. I grabbed some small scissors. I returned to the bedroom.
Heart beating in my throat.
“What the hell did you hide here, Carmen?”, I whispered.
I cut the seam. Carefully.
At first, it only came out stuffed.
Then, folded in four, a transparent plastic envelope appeared.
Inside: a microSD memory.
Two photocopies of a property registry.
A bank receipt in the name of an unknown woman: Lucía Serrano.
On receipt, a periodic transfer. From our shared account.
The last digits… I recognized them instantly. It was our account. Alejandro and me.
I froze.
It wasn’t a mistake.
It wasn’t old.
The date: eleven days ago.
I took out my cell phone. I enlarged the image of the receipt.
I felt like the ground was falling from under my feet.
In the concept: “pension private agreement”.
And just then… I heard Alejandro’s key entering the lock.
The sound of the lock paralyzed me.
The envelope in my hands weighed more than ever.
Each heartbeat reminded me that, in an instant, the truth would come to light.