You hugged him.
“He meant it.”
On the morning of the ruling, you wore a simple white blouse and the only earrings your mother owned that looked formal. Alejandro wore a navy suit borrowed from Martín’s cousin, slightly tight in the shoulders but clean. Your mother came with you, carrying a rosary and a face that dared God to disappoint her.
Beatriz arrived in gray.
She looked thinner.
Still elegant.
Still dangerous.
But no longer untouchable.
The judge’s ruling was long and careful.
The court found sufficient evidence that Alejandro’s inheritance rights had been intentionally concealed. A full trust review was ordered. Certain shares were frozen. Beatriz was removed temporarily from control over portions of the company pending financial audit. The false theft accusation was dismissed as unsupported and potentially retaliatory.
Alejandro did not smile.
He only closed his eyes.
You held his hand under the table.
Then came the sentence that made Beatriz grip the edge of her chair.
“The court further recognizes Mr. Alejandro Mendoza’s independent legal standing over assets previously represented as solely controlled by Mrs. Beatriz Mendoza.”
Independent.
That word moved through him like sunlight entering a room sealed for years.
Outside the courthouse, reporters swarmed.
This time, Beatriz had no assistant shielding her fast enough. Cameras caught her expression, tight with disbelief. Someone shouted, “Did you hide your son’s inheritance?” Another shouted, “Was Carmen right?”
Beatriz turned toward you then.
For the first time since that morning in the mansion, she truly looked at you.
Not as a maid.
Not as dirt.
As an opponent.
You expected hatred.
Instead, you saw something like fear.
That should have satisfied you.
It did not.
Because by then, you understood Beatriz was not a monster from a fairy tale. She was a woman who loved control so much she sacrificed her own son to keep it. That did not make her less guilty. It made the tragedy older.
Alejandro stepped between you and the cameras.
Not to hide you.
To stand with you.
He said only one thing.
“My father left me a legacy. Carmen helped me find myself.”
The clip spread everywhere.
This time, people learned your name.
Not “the maid.”
Carmen.
You finished your administration program the following year.
Alejandro regained a substantial portion of his inheritance after the audit confirmed years of manipulation. Beatriz avoided prison through settlement, restitution, and the kind of legal negotiation only the wealthy can afford, but she lost control of the family company. More importantly, she lost the unquestioned power to decide who mattered.
Alejandro did not return to the mansion.
That surprised everyone.
Especially you.
When the court cleared him to reclaim his old home, he took you there once. The staff had changed. The rooms were covered in silence and dust. The hallway where Beatriz slapped him seemed smaller than you remembered, though maybe you had simply grown.
He stood in the foyer for a long time.
Then he said, “I don’t want to live in a museum of fear.”
You looked at him.
“What do you want to do with it?”
He smiled faintly.
“Turn part of it into a scholarship residence for students who work while studying.”
You stared at him.
“Are you serious?”
“Yes.”
“You know your mother will hate that.”
His smile deepened.
“I know.”