
Manuel said nothing for several seconds.
The silence in the room was so profound that I could hear the sound of my own breathing.
His eyes remained fixed on my body.
Not with desire.
But with a mixture of surprise… and pain.
I felt shame rising in my chest.
At sixty, my body was no longer that of a young woman.
There were scars.
There were signs of time.
But the way Manuel looked at me didn’t seem to have anything to do with that.
“What’s wrong?” I asked again, this time more gently.
He took a step towards me.
Then he slowly raised his hand and pointed at my abdomen.
—That scar…
I looked down.
A thin line ran across my belly.
It had been there for years.
For me it was something normal.
But when I saw Manuel’s expression, I felt a chill.
“What’s wrong with her?” I asked.
Manuel sat on the edge of the bed, still looking at her.
—That scar… is from a cesarean section.
I nodded.
—Yes. When my youngest son was born.
But Manuel slowly denied it.
-No.
I frowned.
—What do you mean, no?
He looked up at me, his eyes filled with a strange emotion.
—That scar is not from a regular cesarean section.
My heart started beating faster.
—So what about?
Manuel took a deep breath.
—Many years ago… when I worked in the north… I had a doctor friend.
I looked at him, confused.
—What does that have to do with anything?
—He told me a story.
The air in the room seemed to have become heavier.
—A young woman arrived at the hospital with a complicated pregnancy. She was poor. She didn’t have money to pay for treatment. And the delivery came too early.
I felt a growing unease.
-AND?
Manuel continued.
—The baby was born prematurely. Very weak. The doctors weren’t sure he would survive.
My hands began to tremble.
—Manuel… why are you telling me this?
He looked directly at me.
—Because the doctor told me something I never forgot.
Silence stretched between us.
—He said the woman asked for something desperate.
My throat got dry.
—He asked that if the baby survived… he be given to another family who could take care of him.
I felt the ground disappear beneath my feet.
“That… that happens sometimes,” I murmured.
Manuel nodded slowly.
-Yeah.
Then his eyes returned to my scar.
—And that woman had exactly the same scar.
The air turned cold.
“That’s impossible,” I said quickly.
But Manuel continued talking.
—The woman was young. She was about twenty years old.
Twenty years.
The same age I was when he left.
—He was from a small town in the south.
I felt my breathing become irregular.
—And the doctor told me something else.
-That?
Manuel spoke in a soft voice.
The woman was crying because she had lost the man she loved. He had gone to work far away… and she didn’t know how to contact him.
My heart was pounding against my chest.
—Manuel…
He continued.
—And before handing over the baby… the woman said something.
He looked me straight in the eyes.
—She said that if that man ever came back… she hoped he could be happy, even if he never knew about that child.
Tears began to fall down my cheeks.
—How… how do you know all that?
Manuel got up slowly.
—Because that doctor was my best friend.
Silence fell upon us.
—For years I thought it was just a sad story.
He swallowed.
—Until I saw you again.
He looked at my scar again.
—And I knew.
I covered my face with my hands.
—I… I was scared.
The words came out between sobs.
My family was poor. You were far away. Nobody knew how to find you. And when the baby was born… he was so weak…
My voice broke.
—They told me I might not survive.
Manuel listened in silence.
—I thought if I gave it to a rich family… I would have a chance.
—And did he survive? —Manuel asked.
I nodded slowly.
-Yeah.
—Do you know where he is now?
I took a deep breath.
-Yeah.
Manuel remained still.
—He is… my eldest son.
The same one who had been against our marriage.
The same one who lived in another city.
Manuel closed his eyes.
For a moment I thought he was angry.
But when she opened them again… they were full of tears.
—So… —she whispered— all this time…
-Yeah.
My voice trembled.
—That child is also yours.
Manuel sat down slowly.
Tears streamed down her face.
—I have a son… and I never knew it.
I approached him carefully.
—I didn’t know how to tell you either.
—Does he know?
I shook my head.
-No.
Silence filled the room again.
But this time it was different.
Manuel took my hand.
—Do you think that… he’ll ever want to meet me?
I smiled through my tears.
-I think so.
He took a deep breath.
—So… maybe our story didn’t end when we were twenty.
I hugged him.
And at that moment I understood something that life had taught me too late.
Some love stories never end.
They just wait.
Sometimes forty years.
Sometimes a whole lifetime.
But when they finally return…
They do it with more truth than ever.
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