PART 1

My sister uploaded a photo of herself smiling in my living room while I was in the ER with an IV in my arm, and my mom reacted with a laughing emoji.

The post said: “Finally, a night without the drama queen.” It had 47 reactions, several mocking comments, and in the background, you could see my couch, my table, my house. The house my grandmother Mercedes left me when she died. The house where my father, my mother, and my sister lived rent-free because I believed that was what family meant.

My name is Valeria, I’m 33 years old, I’m a night-shift nurse at a hospital in Guadalajara, and I’m a single mother to a 7-year-old girl named Sofía. For years, I worked double shifts to support a house that everyone used as if it belonged to them. My dad, Gerardo, had been without steady work for a long time. My mom, Patricia, said her knees didn’t allow her to work. My younger sister, Daniela, changed jobs every 3 months and always had a new excuse.

I paid for electricity, water, food, internet, my mom’s medicines, my dad’s car repairs, and even Sofía’s school supplies. If I ever said I was tired, my dad would say the same phrase:

“Responsible mothers don’t complain.”

And I swallowed the pain.

That night I started my shift at 7. By 2 in the morning, I had been on my feet for almost 14 hours because a coworker didn’t show up and no one else could cover. My hands were shaking, my mouth was dry, my vision was blurry. In the emergency hallway, while I was carrying files to reception, my knees buckled. I remember the floor getting closer. I remember a voice shouting my name. After that, only white lights above me.

The doctor said severe dehydration and physical exhaustion. They kept me under observation with IV fluids. The hospital called my emergency contacts: my dad and my mom. No one answered. No one came.

At 2:37, I looked at my phone and saw Daniela’s post. She was sitting in my living room, holding a glass of wine, smiling as if she were celebrating my absence. In the comments, a neighbor wrote: “Making drama again?” Daniela replied: “As always.” My mom reacted with laughter.

I didn’t cry. I took a screenshot.

The next morning, they discharged me. Driving home felt like moving through fog. When I walked in, my dad was watching TV on the couch. He barely looked at me.

“See? It wasn’t that serious.”

My mom was in the kitchen making coffee.

“There’s bread if you want some.”

Daniela was lying on my couch, phone in hand. She didn’t even look up.

I went upstairs to Sofía’s room. She ran toward me in her uniform and hugged me around the waist.

“Mom, Grandpa said you were just sleepy.”

I hugged her so tightly it almost hurt.

“I’m okay, my little girl.”

But I wasn’t okay. And not just because of the hospital.

A week later, the hospital administration asked me to review some insurance information. The person in charge suggested I check my credit bureau in case there was a problem with my records. I laughed. I didn’t have credit cards. I didn’t have loans. The house was mine, mortgage-free. What could possibly show up?

That night, sitting in my car outside the hospital, I opened the report.

My score was destroyed.

There were 3 credit cards in my name. One for 210,000 pesos, another for 145,000, and another for 98,000. All opened in the last 3 years. All with minimum payments at first. All overdue afterward.

I felt the air leave the car.

I called the bank. They sent me copies of the applications. The signature wasn’t mine. But I knew that handwriting. The elongated G, the slanted P, the heavy stroke of someone who pressed the pen too hard.

It was my father’s signature.

I stared at the screen until my phone almost died. 453,000 pesos of debt. In my name.

That night I called Lucía, a college friend who had become a lawyer.

“Don’t confront him yet,” she told me. “Gather evidence. And Valeria, check Sofía’s credit too.”

I felt cold.

“She’s 7.”

“Exactly.”

When Sofía fell asleep, I searched for her documents in the metal box in my closet. Her birth certificate was still there, but the papers were out of order. My original birth certificate was missing. My old CURP was missing too.

Hours later, the response from a bank inquiry arrived: there was a department store credit card opened in Sofía’s name. Balance: 18,400 pesos.

My daughter barely knew how to multiply.

Someone had used her name to put her in debt before she could even understand what debt was.

And then I remembered an envelope I had seen days earlier on the kitchen table. It came from the civil court. It was addressed to Gerardo Ramírez, my father.

I still didn’t know what it said.

But when I found out, I understood that the cards were only the beginning.

PART 2

Lucía received me in her office the next day. It wasn’t an elegant law firm, but on her desk there was something more powerful than marble: order. I handed her the Facebook screenshots, the credit bureau reports, the bank applications, proof of the card opened in Sofía’s name, and a photo of the court envelope. She read everything without interrupting me. Then she opened the Judiciary website, searched my name, and froze.

“Valeria, your dad filed a petition to have you declared legally incompetent.”

I felt the floor move.

“What?”