The floorboards outside groaned under a heavy, familiar stride. The scent of stale whiskey and cheap tobacco seeped through the cracks of the office door before he even spoke.
“Ramiro!” my dad’s voice boomed, bouncing off the hollow metal walls of the abandoned factory. It wasn’t the slurred, pathetic voice of the man who had been drowning his sorrows in our living room hours ago. This voice was cold, sharp, and dripping with malice. “I know you’re in here, you miserable parasite. I told you twenty years ago what would happen if you ever brought the boy back to this place.”
My uncle’s grip on my shoulder tightened. His hand was trembling, but not from fear—it was the coiled tension of a man who had spent three years in a concrete cage waiting for this exact moment. He leaned down, his breath warm against my ear.
“Don’t make a sound, Diego,” he whispered, his voice barely a vibration. “Whatever happens, you hold onto that folder. That is your life. That is your truth.”
I clutched the yellow folder against my chest. My heart was hammering so violently against my ribs I was terrified my dad would hear it. The world I knew had shattered in the span of five minutes. The man I called father was a monster; the man I called a criminal was my protector. And my name… my name wasn’t even what I thought it was.
The beam of a powerful flashlight cut through the darkness of the hallway, slicing through the dusty air of the office.
Clack.
The unmistakable sound of a revolver being cocked echoed through the cavernous space.
“You always were too soft, Ramiro,” my dad’s voice came closer. The heavy footsteps stopped right outside the shattered door frame. “You took the fall to keep the sister safe, to keep the kid alive. I gave you a choice back then: the prison cell or the graveyard. You chose the cell. But you just couldn’t stay away, could you?”
My uncle stood up slowly, stepping into the path of the doorway, shielding me completely with his body. “The deal was that you’d take care of them, Arthur,” Ramiro said, his voice ringing with a terrifying calmness. “You stole my father’s shipping company. You bled my sister dry. And now you’ve ruined them anyway. You’re losing the house. Diego is dropping out of school to feed you. You broke the deal.”
Arthur—the man I had called ‘Dad’ my entire life—stepped into the room. The flashlight in his left hand blinded us, but in his right hand, the matte-black barrel of a .38 revolver gleamed under the flickering lightbulb. His face was twisted into a cruel sneer I had never seen before. The pathetic drunk from the living room was gone; standing before us was the calculated predator who had orchestrated our family’s ruin.
“The market crashed, businesses fail, that’s life,” Arthur spat, kicking a rotting box out of his way. He shined the light directly onto the folder in my hands. His eyes narrowed. “I see you found the paperwork. I should have burned this place to the ground years ago, but I kept it as a reminder of how easy it was to break the proud Vargas family.”
“You didn’t break us,” I found my voice, though it cracked with a mixture of terror and burning rage. “You lied to me. My whole life. Why? Why did you take me?”
Arthur shifted the flashlight’s beam to my face, blinding me. He let out a dark, mocking laugh. “Because your grandfather was going to leave everything to your mother and her useless brother. Every single cent of the Maldonado Shipping empire. But a bastard child? A child born out of wedlock to a woman whose reputation I could ruin? That changed the dynamic. Your grandfather threatened to cut me out completely when I tried to take the company. So, he had an… accident.”
“You killed him,” I whispered, the horror washing over me in waves.
“I secured my future,” Arthur corrected coldly. “And when your uncle here started asking too many questions, I framed him for the warehouse robbery. I told your mother if she didn’t marry me, if she didn’t let me adopt you and change your name to Maldonado, I would ensure Ramiro never survived his first week in the state pen. She complied to save his life. And he confessed to save yours.”
The puzzle pieces snapped together with a sickening crunch. My mother’s tears. Her begging for forgiveness in the middle of the street. Her letting him sleep in the shed because she knew—she knew he had sacrificed his entire youth to keep the monster away from her son.
“You’re a demon,” Ramiro growled, his muscles tensing.
“I’m a businessman who is about to clean up his last remaining liabilities,” Arthur said. He raised the revolver, leveling it directly at Ramiro’s chest. “The bank is taking the house anyway. A tragic murder-suicide in an abandoned factory in Flint… the broken, ex-con brother-in-law snaps, kills the son, and the grieving father has to defend himself. The police won’t look twice at a thief’s body.”