“Your mother asked me to keep this until you stopped asking permission to be yourself.”
Inside were photos, a diary, and a sealed envelope with my name written by my mother: “For Mariana, when she is strong enough.”
I didn’t open it that night. I was afraid.
But one week before Father’s Day, I heard Graciela talking on the phone in the hallway of the house.
“Fernando is going to break her in front of everyone,” she was saying. “When Mariana throws her tantrum, we’ll finally be able to remove her from the family without looking cruel. No one is going to want a dramatic teacher claiming inheritance.”
That was when I understood that they didn’t just despise me. They were planning to erase me.
That same night, I opened my mother’s envelope. And what I read left me breathless.
PART 2
The letter began with a sentence that still breaks me inside: “My Mariana, if you are reading this, it is because I could no longer protect you.” My hands were trembling so much that I had to sit down on the floor. My mother explained that Fernando Santillán was not my biological father. Before marrying him, she had loved a man named Andrés Beltrán, a rural teacher from Oaxaca, sweet, poor, and stubborn. Andrés died in a landslide 2 months before the wedding they were planning, and my mother discovered she was pregnant with me shortly afterward. My maternal grandfather, worried about the scandal, accepted Fernando’s proposal: he would marry Elena, legally adopt me, and, in exchange, receive the rights to some family land in Santa Fe that later became the foundation of his real estate empire. “He promised to raise you as his daughter,” my mother wrote. “But from the very first day, he looked at you as the price he had to pay.” Under the letter was my adoption certificate, with Fernando’s signature. There was also a copy of an old agreement where the land was mentioned. I cried, but not from sadness. I cried because for the first time I understood that it wasn’t my fault. I had not failed as a daughter. He had never wanted to be my father. Even so, I needed to confirm it. I asked Daniel for help, a teacher at my school who had been my friend for years. At a family dinner, I took some hairs from Fernando’s jacket and sent a DNA test to a certified laboratory. The result arrived 14 days later: probability of paternity 0.00%. I laughed alone in my empty classroom, surrounded by my students’ notebooks. I laughed and cried at the same time. All the contempt, all the comparisons, all the times I had tried to earn love with good grades, degrees, obedience, and silence, all of it had been a closed door from before I was born. I went to the lawyer who had handled my mother’s affairs, Don Ernesto Valdés, a 76-year-old man who lived in Coyoacán. When he saw the papers, he sighed as if he had carried that secret for too long.