He listens.
Then he says, “Fine. Not a gift. A contract.”
You narrow your eyes.
“What contract?”
“You finish school. You go to college. You become a teacher. Then you work with the rehab center’s education program for two years helping patients who missed school because of illness or injury.”
You stare at him.
“That is still charity.”
“No,” he says. “That is investment.”
You cry that night.
Not in front of him.
In the bathroom mirror of the small apartment you now share with your mother after leaving your father. Your mother stands in the doorway, older somehow, softer too.
“I was wrong,” she says.
You turn.
She is crying.
“I thought survival meant giving up dreams before they could hurt you. I did that to you.”
For years, you wanted those words.
Now that they are here, they hurt more than you expected.
“I needed you to protect me,” you whisper.
“I know.”
Your mother covers her mouth.
“I know, mija.”
Forgiveness does not arrive all at once.
But that night, something begins.
Two years pass.
You finish high school through an accelerated program, then start college in Los Angeles. You study education and literature. You work part-time at the rehabilitation center, reading to patients, helping teenagers keep up with schoolwork, teaching adults how to write essays for GED programs.
The first time someone calls you “Miss Maria,” you almost cry in the hallway.
Alejandro sees you.
Of course he does.
He is walking with a cane that day, slow but steady.
“You okay?” he asks.
You nod.
“They called me Miss Maria.”
His smile softens.
“That’s who you are.”
You look at him.
“And who are you?”