The millionaire was relaxing at his country villa… until he discovered two twins standing at his door.
Moisés Aranda was no ordinary man. By the age of thirty, he had already built an empire in Monterrey: hotels, construction companies, investments, offices bearing his name in letters of steel and glass. He had learned to close multimillion-dollar deals with a steady gaze and a calm voice. But there was one defeat he couldn’t mask with money, prestige, or silence: loneliness.
Three years earlier, he had married Valeria, the love of his life. She had a clear laugh, the kind that makes any place feel like home. Together they dreamed of a large family, a house filled with little steps, toys in the living room, and drawings stuck to the refrigerator. Valeria had even chosen names for their future children, bought a white blanket “just in case,” and joked that Moisés would be a very doting father.
But life doesn’t always give warning before it strikes.
Valeria fell ill suddenly. A strange, cruel, swift illness. Moisés did everything in his power: private hospitals, specialists in Mexico City, treatments abroad, famous doctors, desperate prayers in empty chapels. He would bring the best doctor in the world if necessary. He would pay whatever it took. He would do the impossible.
And yet, in a gray October, Valeria died.
She left everything intact and, at the same time, shattered. Her perfume on the scarves in the closet. Her favorite mug next to the coffee maker. Her robe hanging behind the door. Her photograph smiling on the piano. And in Moisés’s chest, a void so deep it no longer seemed like pain, but a way of life.
After burying her, he faded away. He stopped going to the office. He ate out of obligation. He spent hours sitting at the window of his mansion, staring at the garden without really seeing it. Friends kept trying. Family worried. But no one could quite reach him.
That’s when therapy began.
Dr. Esteban Salazar was a serene man with white hair and calm hands. He didn’t talk much. He listened as if he knew that some wounds don’t need haste, just space.
One afternoon, after a long silence, the doctor looked at him intently and said:
—Moses, the grief won’t move if you don’t move either. You need to leave that house. Breathe some fresh air. Go somewhere where there’s still something alive inside you.
Moses let out a dry, humorless laugh.
—I don’t feel like going anywhere.
“I’m not asking if you want to,” the doctor replied. “I’m telling you that you need to.”
Moses remained silent. Then he murmured:
“There’s a country house in Valle de Bravo… Valeria loved it. I haven’t been back for over two years.”
—Then go there.
A week later, without really knowing why, he obeyed.
The house was a few hours from the city. It wasn’t as luxurious as the mansion, but it had something none of his other properties did: memories. A wooden deck, a garden with bougainvillea, fruit trees, the clean scent of the wind, and the echo of happy days. He had spent his honeymoon there with Valeria. He had seen her walk barefoot on the wet grass there. He had heard her say, one starlit night, “Here I can truly imagine growing old with you.”
When he arrived, the afternoon sun was still beating down on the roof. He turned off the truck, took a deep breath, and stood motionless for a few seconds, gathering courage to face the memories.
Then he opened the car door.
And he saw them.
They stood before the wooden door of the house, as if they had been waiting for him. Two identical little girls, barefoot, in dirty dresses, their light hair tangled by the dust and the breeze. Each held a small piece of hard bread in her hand, clutching it as if it were a treasure. They didn’t cry. They didn’t run. They just stared at him with those enormous, serious, silent eyes.
Moses felt his heart give way.
He approached slowly, as if any sudden movement might shatter the surreal scene. He knelt down until he was at her level.
“Hello,” she said in a low voice. “What are your names?”
One of them pointed to her chest.
—Luli.
Then he pointed to the other one.
—Lola.
Moses almost smiled.
—Luli and Lola?
They both nodded at the same time.
—And where is your mother?
The girl who had spoken lowered her gaze. The other one gripped her piece of bread tighter. There was no response. Only that strange silence, too still for two children barely three years old.
Moses looked toward the road. There were no cars. There was no one. The path was empty, as if the whole world had left those two girls right there.
He saw them again.
Are you hungry?
Lola picked up the piece of bread and said:
—Yes… but this one belongs to my mom.
Those words made his throat tighten.
She rushed into the house, grabbed the first thing she found in the pantry, and returned with a box of cookies and a pitcher of water. She bent down again.
—These are mine. I’m sharing them with you. Save your mom’s bread for later, okay?
The girls looked at each other, as if they were conversing with their eyes. Then they agreed. They ate slowly, with a care beyond their years, as if they knew all too well the fear of something running out.
Moisés called the municipal police, the DIF (Family Services), and the mayor’s office of the nearest town. He explained everything, sent photos, and asked for help. But it was Friday afternoon. They told him that no one would show up until Monday.
Monday.
There were three days left.
She looked at the girls, who were now curiously touching the dried flowers in a pot by the terrace. She had never in her life cared for a child. She didn’t know what to feed them, what soap to use, how to get them to sleep, how to comb their hair. She knew nothing.
But she also knew one thing: she wasn’t going to leave them alone.
“Well,” he murmured, taking one of her little hands on each side. “I guess we’ll work this out.”
The first battle was in the bathroom. Both seemed wary of the enormous tub, but Luli, the more mischievous one, started splashing water as soon as she felt safe. Lola, more reserved, watched Moses’s every move as if she were deciding whether that sad man was trustworthy or not.
Suddenly, Luli threw water in his face.
Moses froze.
And then something happened that hadn’t happened to her in ages: she burst out laughing. A real laugh, deep, pure, as if it sprang from some forgotten place. The little girl opened her eyes, surprised, and then laughed too. Lola tried to hold it in, but ended up smiling slightly.
After their bath, Moses discovered he had no clothes for them. He improvised with two of his shirts. They fit them like enormous dresses. The girls looked at each other, burst out laughing, and began to twirl around the room, dragging their sleeves.
That laughter filled the house.
No, more than that: he woke her up.
That night he prepared rice, scrambled eggs, and orange juice for them. They devoured the food without complaint. Later, while he was washing the dishes, he felt a tug on his pants. It was Luli, with her arms outstretched.
—Loaded?
He scooped her up in his arms without thinking. The little girl rested her head on his chest, peaceful, as if she’d been doing it for years. Moisés stood motionless. He had dreamed so many times of holding a child like this, with that warm weight, with that scent of soap and sleep, that for a moment he felt his soul break and heal at the same time.
That night she pushed two beds together in the guest room. The girls lay down holding hands. Before turning off the light, Luli said sleepily:
—Good evening, sir.
He rested his forehead against the wall and closed his eyes.
By the second day he was no longer “sir”.
It was “Moi”.
By Sunday, the girls were running around the house calling his name, asking the name of everything, picking oranges from the garden, hiding behind the curtains. Lola, the quiet one, sat beside him on the terrace at dawn and, after watching him for a while, asked him:
—Do you miss someone too?
Moses looked at her, startled.
-Why do you say that?
—Because you see far away… like I see far away when I miss my mom.
He felt his eyes blurring.
“Yes,” he admitted. “I miss someone too.”
Lola placed her little hand on his.
—Sometimes it hurts a lot… but then it passes a little.
Moses wept there, without hiding, while the little girl stood beside him, small and wise in a heartbreaking way.
On Monday, the social worker, Mariana Robles, arrived with a patrol car and a folder under her arm. She had come to take the girls to a temporary shelter while their origins were investigated. Moisés felt his stomach clench. Luli clung to his leg. Lola lifted her face and looked at him with a seriousness that seemed too mature for her age.
“I’m coming with you,” he promised, kneeling in front of them. “I won’t leave you alone.”
And he did.
He accompanied them to the shelter, spoke with lawyers, authorities, and psychologists. He hired a family law specialist and two private investigators to find the girls’ biological family. He wanted to do the right thing. But deep down, a truth had already taken root within him: he wanted to adopt them.
No. I needed them.
She returned to the mansion that night and felt the cruelest silence she had ever known. Without their footsteps, their voices, their laughter, the house was once again just a large, empty building. She sat in the darkness and, after a long time, prayed.
—God… I don’t know if they’re meant for me. But when they were with me, I felt like I still had a purpose. If it’s your will, don’t let them suffer anymore.
In the following weeks, he visited them every day. He brought them stories, dolls, chopped fruit, and hair ribbons. The shelter workers told him something that left him trembling:
“Mr. Aranda, when you leave, they stay at the window until your car disappears. They recognize you as their father.”
Two months later, the researchers submitted their report.
There were no birth certificates. No hospital records. No missing persons reports, no relatives, no matches in any database. Nothing. It was as if Luli and Lola had never existed on paper.
The news stunned the authorities. And, at the same time, it cleared the legal path.
With the shelter’s favorable reports, the investigators’ report, the psychological evaluations, and the documented cohabitation, the adoption process moved forward. On the day of the final hearing, Moisés arrived with trembling hands and a racing heart.
When the judge approved the adoption, she felt like the world stopped.
Outside, in the hallway, Luli and Lola were waiting for him, holding hands. As soon as they saw him come out, they ran towards him.
—Moi! Moi!
He knelt down and hugged them both at the same time.
“That’s it,” she whispered, her voice breaking. “It’s official. They’re my daughters.”
Luli held his face in her little hands.
—And are you our dad?
Moses smiled through his tears.
—Yes. I’m her dad.
Lola clung to his neck. Luli began to laugh. And Moisés understood, in the midst of that embrace, that this was the exact sound of a miracle.
Days later, he took them to the mansion. They entered in awe, admiring the staircase, the paintings, the enormous window in the entrance hall. But Lola stopped in front of a photograph of Moisés and Valeria on their wedding day.
—Who is she?
He knelt down next to the girl.
—Her name is Valeria. She was my wife. She was a very good woman… and I would have loved her very much.
Luli bowed her head.
—Does she see us from heaven?
Moses took a while to answer, because he felt a sweet and painful knot at the same time.
—Yes —he finally said—. I think so.
Lola looked at the photo for another second and then murmured:
—Then you are no longer alone.
That phrase pierced him.
He was not alone.
For the first time in years, he wasn’t alone.
As the months passed, the mansion stopped sounding empty. It filled with the sounds of children running through the hallway, bedtime stories, lost hair ribbons, and drawings stuck to the refrigerator. Moisés learned to braid hair in crooked braids, to distinguish between tantrums and genuine tears, to make star-shaped pancakes, and to sleep with a little girl in each arm when one of them had nightmares.
A year after the adoption, they returned together to the country house.
It was dusk. The sky was painted orange and pink. The bougainvillea swayed in the breeze. Luli and Lola jumped out of the car, laughing, with tangerines in their hands. Moisés stood still in front of the old wooden door, in the exact same spot where he had first seen them.
She remembered the dirty clothes, the bare feet, the stale bread, the big, silent eyes.
And he understood.
He didn’t understand with his head, but with his soul.
She understood that sometimes life breaks something just to make room for what’s to come. That lost love doesn’t always disappear: sometimes it changes form and returns by another path. That God doesn’t always answer as one asks, but sometimes He answers exactly as one needs.
“Dad!” Luli shouted from the garden. “Come and see!”
“There’s a little bird!” added Lola.
Moses smiled, walked over to them, and took one of their hands.
With the sun setting over the field, with his daughters pulling him along amid laughter, he felt such a deep peace that remembering no longer hurt.
The wound was still there, yes. But now it was no longer a grave.
It was a door.
And upon crossing it, Moses finally found the family his heart had longed for all his life.
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