
Clara tried to warn Alejandro, she shouted from the doorway, she pleaded. But he slammed the solid oak door in her face. The clang of the lock was the final sound of her doom. Now, alone on the street, Clara wondered how she would survive without the smiles of those children, without
—Mama Clara! —The scream wasn’t a sound, it was an explosion.
Clara froze. The air caught in her throat. She knew those voices better than her own breath. They were the voices that woke her every morning asking for chocolate milk, the voices that whispered “I’m scared” when there was a storm. Instinct was stronger than the dismissal order. She turned slowly, and what she saw made the world stop.
There came Lucas and Mateo.
They ran toward her with outstretched arms, stumbling, desperate, as if they were fleeing a fire. But what filled Clara with absolute terror was not seeing them cry, but seeing them running barefoot on the scorching asphalt and their clothes stained red.
Behind them, the image of power turned to impotence: Don Alejandro, the owner of that entire empire, ran after his children, his face contorted with despair. He was no longer the impeccably dressed magnate in an Italian suit; he was a terrified father, his tie flying over his shoulder.
“Lucas, Mateo, stop!” Alexander roared, his voice breaking. “For God’s sake, stop!”
But the twins weren’t listening. For them, the only danger wasn’t a speeding car or their father’s fury. The only mortal danger was losing the only woman who had ever held them when their mother died.
Clara dropped the suitcase. She didn’t care about the sharp pain in her knees as she fell onto the pavement. Her arms opened instinctively, like the wings of a bird trying to protect its young. The children crashed into her with the force of a small hurricane, burying their faces in her uniform, clinging to her neck like shipwrecked sailors.
“Don’t go! Don’t leave us!” Mateo shouted, his voice breaking into an unintelligible plea.
Clara wrapped them tightly, but then she felt something wet and sticky. When she looked at her yellow gloves, terror gripped her: they were stained crimson red.
“Blood!” Clara gasped. “They’re bleeding! Good Lord, what happened to them?”
Lucas had a deep cut on his forearm. Mateo’s hands were covered in small cuts and his knees were raw and skinned.
“We broke the window…” Lucas sobbed, clutching his apron. “We had to break it to reach you. Dad locked us in.”
Clara’s heart stopped for a moment. They had been hurt for her. They had walked through broken glass just to keep her from leaving. The magnitude of that love hit her harder than any insult.
At that moment, a menacing shadow fell over them. Alejandro arrived, breathing heavily, red with anger and confusion. His eyes, poisoned by Valeria’s lies, saw only a thief manipulating his children.
“Let them go!” Alejandro roared, trying to snatch Mateo from Clara’s arms. “Get your filthy hands off my children! I’ll throw you in jail for kidnapping!”
“No, sir! Be careful!” Clara cried, protecting the boy’s injured hands. “You’re hurting him! He has glass in his hands!”
Alejandro stopped, confused by the protective ferocity of the woman he had just dismissed. He looked down and saw the blood. He saw the deep cuts. A father’s panic momentarily replaced his fury.
“What did you do to them?” he whispered, horrified.
“She didn’t do anything!” Lucas shouted. The timider twin stood before his father with the courage of a giant, his fists clenched and filled with rage. “You’re the dangerous one! You and that witch Valeria!”
The mention of his fiancée’s name in that tone was like a bucket of ice water for Alejandro.
—Lucas, don’t disrespect him!
“Valeria put the watch there!” the boy shouted. The words came out like bullets. “Mateo and I saw her! We were playing hide-and-seek under your bed. She came in, took the watch out of your drawer, laughed nastyly, and put it in Clara’s bag.”
