It changed his face disturbingly.
Not enough to soften it, exactly. More like revealing a human line beneath architecture. Before you could think too much about that, a female agent approached and handed him a phone. He listened, asked two precise questions, then ended the call.
“They’re moving Esteban to federal holding,” he said. “He asked for three attorneys and one senator.”
You let out a breath that was almost laughter. “Good.”
He studied you. “You should change before we leave. Unless you want to arrive at your brother’s hospital dressed like vengeance.”
You looked down at yourself.
The veil was torn at one edge. The hem carried dust from the courtyard. The sleeves glittered with the absurd stubborn beauty of hand-sewn lace, as if the dress had not noticed the war. Suddenly the entire thing seemed grotesque and hilarious. A museum-grade wedding gown from a marriage that never happened.
“Burn it,” you said.
Adrián raised an eyebrow. “The dress?”
“The whole day.”
“Working on it.”
You did not travel back to the mansion.
That decision came instantly and without grief.
An agent retrieved a change of clothes from a secure bag packed earlier by a housekeeper you would later discover had quietly cooperated with investigators for months after noticing discrepancies in your permissions and overhearing one too many closed-door threats. You changed in a safe office two blocks away into jeans, a cream sweater, and low boots that made you feel like a person instead of a headline. Your wedding gown disappeared into evidence inventory because even fabric can carry meaning when a case involves coercion.
By dusk, you were on a plane to Guadalajara.
The cabin was small, government-chartered, plain. Your mother sat across from you, sleeping from sheer collapse or sedation withdrawal or both. Denise Park, the emergency counsel assigned to you that afternoon, reviewed documents without looking up much. Adrián sat near the aisle, jacket off, white shirt sleeves rolled once, reading a file as if the day had not included church bells, ruined vows, federal exposure, and your life splitting open in public.
You watched him until he looked up.
“What?”
“You read too calmly.”
“That’s usually why they send me.”
“Do they also send you to pretend to be beggars often?”
“Only for very special weddings.”
The answer came so dry you almost laughed.
Almost.
Instead, you asked, “Did you choose that part?”
He closed the file. “Esteban wanted a man he believed no one would question. Disposable, humiliating, dependent on cash. He had intermediaries. We replaced the original contact point before the final arrangement was locked.”
A cold twist went through you. “What happened to the real man?”
“Safe,” Adrián said. “Paid, relocated, and given medical help he should have had years ago. He was never going to stand at that altar.”
That eased something in you you had not fully acknowledged. The thought of another vulnerable man being bought for this cruelty would have stayed under your skin.
You looked out the window into the dark.
The plane lights reflected back a version of yourself you barely recognized—eyes older, mouth harder, face scrubbed clean of wedding makeup but not of the day. Somewhere between the cathedral and the sky, victimhood had loosened its grip on the shape of you. Not because pain was gone. Because knowledge had entered it.
You were no longer trapped inside his script.
Mateo was awake when you reached the hospital.
He looked smaller than you remembered and braver than any child should have to be. The room was dim except for one lamp and the green blink of monitors. As soon as he saw you, his whole face changed—fear first, because fear had been living in him too, then relief so intense it made him wince.
“Clara?”