The young man lowered his arm slowly, as if the image suddenly carried weight. He looked at Elena, truly looked at her, and something shifted in his expression.
“My name is Daniel,” he said after a long pause. “That’s my sister.”
Elena’s knees nearly gave out.
“Your sister?” she whispered. “What is her name?”
Daniel swallowed hard.
“Sofía.”
When Truth Finds Its Way Home
The silence that followed felt unreal. Elena could barely breathe.
She invited the young men to sit. Her hands trembled as she reached for water, and Daniel gently took the pitcher from her. He spoke carefully, as if reopening an old wound.
Years ago, when Daniel was still a teenager, his mother had returned home one evening with a frightened young girl. She said she had found her alone near a roadway. The child cried for her mother and spoke of a beach, a yellow dress, and a lost doll.
Daniel admitted he knew something was wrong. But he was young. His mother told him not to ask questions. She was afraid. Afraid of losing the girl. Afraid of doing the wrong thing.
Sofía stayed.
She went to school. She laughed. She learned to sing. At night, she asked to hear a familiar prayer, one her mother used to say. Elena heard this and broke down, tears flowing freely at last.
“Is she alive?” Elena asked, barely able to speak.
Daniel nodded.
“She is. She’s strong.”
A Reunion Years in the Making
That same afternoon, Daniel took Elena to the small community clinic where Sofía worked. The drive felt endless. Elena clutched her rosary, torn between hope and fear. What if Sofía didn’t recognize her? What if she didn’t want to?