Six years later… And she didn’t come back alone
Elena had disappeared from the village like a shadow one early morning in November, without a word, without a goodbye. For some it was an escape, for others, an act of survival. The truth is that, after Marcos left her for a younger woman and told her that his love “was not enough to build a family,” she packed what little she had left of dignity and left.
For six years, Marcos knew nothing about her. He married again, childless. He lived a quiet, if somewhat monotonous, life in the same house where he had made Elena cry so many nights. He had buried the memory of her like someone burying a bad emotional investment.
But that autumn afternoon, while he was mowing the garden, he saw her. Elena, more serene, more confident, with her head held high and a look that no longer trembled. Next to him, walked two five-year-old children, with the same dark hair and the same brown eyes that he saw every morning in the mirror.
“Hello, Marcos,” she said, without a trace of resentment. They wanted to meet their father.
He froze. His heart beat in his chest with a force he hadn’t felt for years. He looked at the children, who were watching him with a mixture of shyness and curiosity. I didn’t need DNA testing. They were his.
“Why didn’t you tell me?” He managed to murmur.
“Because when you left me, you told me you didn’t want a family. So I respected your wish. But now they ask, and they deserve an answer.
The silence that followed was heavier than any reproach. Marcos felt a part of his soul break, that part that had never finished healing.
“And now?” he asked.
“Now it’s up to you,” Elena replied. I’ve already done my part.
And with a slight but firm smile, he took his children’s hands and said to them:
“Come on, Dad needs time.
And they left, leaving him there, among the dry leaves and the bitter aroma of repentance.