An elderly woman, after serving her sentence, returned to her son’s house seeking refuge… but he slammed the door in her face. Justice would soon catch up with him.

An elderly woman, after serving her sentence, returned seeking refuge in her son’s house… but he slammed the door in her face. Justice would soon catch up with him.

The dust of the long journey, rough and gray, had stuck to her skin, mixed with the sweat of exhaustion, transforming into an invisible but unbearable burden. The bus gave a final roar and pulled away, leaving her alone at a deserted bus stop on the outskirts of Toledo. The air smelled of absinthe, ripe wheat, and the distant smoke of burning wood: an ancient, familiar aroma, so dear it brought tears to her eyes. Five years. Exactly five years, two months, and seventeen days in which her lungs hadn’t breathed that air. Only the stale stench of the cell, the guards’ shouts, and the creaking of the locks.

Isabel took a step, then another, leaning against an old fence of branches. “This is my world,” she thought. The world she had given five years of her life to. Her vision blurred before her tired eyes, but she pressed her fingers against the rough wood and opened her eyelids.

And there it was. Her house. Small, made of wood darkened by time, but solid, firm. A thin thread rose from the smoke in the chimney toward the sky, and a golden light shone in the windows in the autumn sunset. That meant he was inside. Her Adrian. Her only son. Her misguided love, but immense and all-consuming.

Her heart pounded, erasing the weariness of years of absence. Her feet carried her alone across the yard. She noticed that the porch was new, with carved railings, that the shed had been repaired, that the fence was painted. A wave of pride tightened her throat: “Bravo, Adrian, bravo, my son. You’re keeping the house as I taught you.” She could already imagine the hug, the touch of his cheek, the new life after all the bad times.

The door resisted for a moment, swollen with damp. Isabel pushed it open with effort and took a step into the hallway. Then he stopped abruptly: before her stood an unknown man. Tall, broad-shouldered, wearing a loose sweater, holding a towel. He looked at her in surprise, assessing her aging face, the old-fashioned scarf, and the rough prison coat.

“Who are you looking for, Grandma?” he asked in a calm voice, but icy as a distance.

Isabel’s throat closed. She could barely manage to whisper:

“Adrián… Where’s Adrián?”

The man wrinkled his brow, noticing the worn clothes peeking out from under the coat. A flash of irony appeared in his eyes.

“Adrián? Adrián García? Ma’am, that man sold me this house three years ago, right after he finished his sentence. Now I’m the owner.”

The world didn’t collapse: it froze. The words—three years, he sold, after serving—p:ierced her heart like nails. She remembered the past: that partner, Andrés, who had dragged her son into the shady business of illegal logging. They were caught. And she, the mother, took all the blame on herself. The court believed a sick, elderly woman more easily than a strong young man. She served five years in prison for him. And he… had sold his home. His strength. His memory.

Dazed, she backed into the parking lot. She sank onto the cold bench, silent tears running down her cheeks. She wasn’t sobbing; she was simply crying, wiping her face with the corner of her old handkerchief.

“Adrian… my son… Where are you? Are you still alive? My heart feels that misfortune has overtaken you…” she whispered in the solitude.

Isabel staggered, but the stranger gently caught her, keeping her from falling. In an instant, she understood: the son for whom she had given up her freedom had betrayed her. And worst of all: no one knew where he was now. Was he still alive? Or had misfortune already reached him?

The man sighed, took out a card, and held it out firmly.

“My name is Victor Morales. I was the lawyer in some of your cases. If you really want to know the truth, come see me. But be prepared: what you discover will not be easy to bear.”

Isabel clutched the card with trembling hands. For the first time in years, a spark ignited inside her: this wasn’t the end of the road. There was still a route to the truth.

The night was endless.

Thoughts raced, images from the past returned: the rosy-cheeked boy who said, “Mom, I’ll always take care of you,” and then the young man who chose the darkest shortcut. She had carried her guilt, but now she understood: the sin never disappeared, it was only postponed. And the punishment had already caught up with her.

The next morning, with slow but determined steps, Isabel headed toward the city, to the lawyer’s office. The streets seemed strange to her, people hurried by, but a new strength beat in her heart.

Víctor Morales greeted her with respect. A voluminous file awaited her on the desk. She opened it, and the first pages took her breath away: forged contracts, enormous debts, testimonies about disappearances, her son’s name linked to dangerous people.

Isabel put her hand to her chest. There was no more room for illusions. The son for whom she had sacrificed her freedom had himself chosen a path of no return. And yet… she felt the fight was not over.

Because, deep in her heart, a voice whispered: “Even if the son falls, it is the mother’s duty to uphold the truth.”

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