“Another sentimental letter?”
“Open it when you have the courage.”
Then I left the house.
When my father opened that envelope, his scream could be heard all the way to the garden.
But to understand why that envelope could destroy him, I have to tell you what happened 2 months earlier.
I grew up in a mansion where everything shone except affection. My father’s house had Italian marble, huge windows, fountains, very expensive paintings, and a circular driveway where my used Honda always looked like an insult. My brother Iván, 35, was the perfect heir: tailored suit, luxury SUV, financial director of Grupo Santillán. Renata, 27, Graciela’s daughter, was image director, even though she couldn’t make a presentation without someone correcting it for her.
And then there was me. The teacher. The one who wore discount dresses, carried lunch in a Tupperware container, and talked about children learning to read as if that mattered more than closing deals.
To my father, helping others was a waste of time if it didn’t appear in a magazine.
Every Friday we had dinner at the family house. It wasn’t a dinner; it was an exam. My father asked about sales, investments, campaigns, contacts. When it was my turn, he did it with a look of annoyance.
“And you, Mariana? Any real achievement this week?”
One time I told him that one of my students had won a scholarship to a private secondary school.
Iván laughed.
“And how much does that bring in? A cardboard diploma?”
My father didn’t even smile.
“Your problem is that you confuse charity with success.”
I learned to swallow my answers.
My mother, Elena, died when I was 5 years old in a car accident. I barely remembered her voice, only her gardenia perfume and the way she hugged me as if the world wanted to take me from her arms. The only person who talked about her was my aunt Lucía, her younger sister, a retired librarian who lived in Querétaro, surrounded by books, plants, and old photographs.
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