The boy’s name was Iktan. He was 10 years old.
Iktan had no parents. He only remembered that, when he was about two years old, Don Eusebio, an old beggar who lived under a bridge near the La Viga Canal in Mexico City, had found him inside a plastic basin, floating along the edge of a ditch after a storm.

The little boy couldn’t speak or walk. He just cried until he lost his voice.
Around her wrist was a single thing:
an old, frayed, red woven bracelet,
and a damp piece of paper on which one could barely read:
“Please, someone good take care of this child.
His name is Iktan.”
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Don Eusebio had nothing: no house, no money, no family.
He only had tired legs and a heart that still knew how to love.
Even so, he carried the child and raised him with whatever little he could find: stale bread, donated soup, recycled bottles.
I always told Iktan:
—When you grow up, and if you ever find your mother… forgive her. No one abandons their child without it hurting their soul.
Iktan grew up among street vendors, open-air markets, and cold nights under the bridge. He never knew what his mother looked like.
Don Eusebio only told him that when he found him, the paper had a lipstick stain and a long hair tangled in the bracelet.
He thought his mother was very young… perhaps too young to raise a child.
One day, Don Eusebio became seriously ill with a lung ailment and was taken to a public hospital.
Penniless, Iktan had to go out and beg for food more than ever.
That afternoon, he heard people saying that the biggest wedding of the year was being held at a mansion in Polanco.
With an empty stomach and a dry throat, he decided to try his luck.
He stood timidly near the entrance.
The tables were overflowing with food: mole, carnitas, sweet bread, cold sodas.
A kitchen assistant saw him, felt sorry for him, and gave him a hot plate.
—Sit over there and eat quickly, kid. Don’t let anyone see you.
Iktan gave thanks and began to eat, looking inside.
The mariachi music, the elegant suits, the shimmering dresses.
He thought silently:
Will my mom live in a place like that…
or will she be poor like me?
Then the master of ceremonies’ voice rang out:
—Ladies and gentlemen… the bride!
The music changed.
All eyes turned to the staircase adorned with white flowers.
And there she appeared.
Wearing an immaculate white dress, with a serene smile, her long black hair falling in soft waves.
Beautiful, radiant.
But Iktan froze.
It wasn’t her beauty that paralyzed him…
but the red bracelet on the bride’s wrist.
It was identical.
The same wool.
The same color.
The same worn knot.
Iktan rubbed his eyes.
He stood up abruptly and walked toward the stage, trembling.
“Ma’am…” she said, her voice breaking, “
that bracelet… are you… are you my mother?”
The room fell into absolute silence.
The music kept playing, but nobody was breathing.
The bride stopped.
She looked at her wrist.
Then she looked at the child.
And he saw her eyes.
The same ones.
Her legs gave way. She knelt in front of him.
“What’s your name?” he asked, trembling.
—Iktan… I am Iktan… —the boy replied, crying.
The microphone fell to the floor.
Murmurs erupted:
—Is he your son?
—Really?
—How can that be?
The groom, an elegant and serene man, approached.
“What’s wrong?” he asked in a low voice.
The bride burst into tears.
—I was 18… I got pregnant… I was alone… without support…
I couldn’t keep him…
I gave him up…
But I never forgot him…
I kept this bracelet all these years hoping to find him again…
She hugged the child tightly.
—Forgive me, son! Forgive me!
Iktan hugged her too.
—Don Eusebio told me not to hate you…
I’m not angry, Mom…
I just wanted to find you…
The white dress was stained with tears and dust.
Nobody cared.
The groom remained silent.
Nobody knew what he would do.
Cancel the wedding?
Take the child away?
Pretend nothing happened?
Then he approached…
and did not lift the bride up.
He crouched down in front of Iktan, reaching his level.
—Would you like to stay… and eat with us? —he asked gently.
Iktan shook his head.
—I… I just want my mom.
The man smiled.
And he hugged them both.
—Then… if you want…
from today you will have a mother…
and also a father.
The bride looked at him, incredulous, crying.
Aren’t you angry with me?
I hid my past from you…
“I didn’t marry your past,” he whispered. “
I married the woman I love.
And I love you even more knowing how much you suffered.”
That wedding ceased to be luxurious.
It stopped being elegant.
It became something sacred.
The guests began to applaud, through tears.
They weren’t celebrating a wedding.
They were celebrating a reunion.
Iktan took his mother’s hand.
And the hand of the man who had just called him “son”.
There were no more rich or poor.
No differences.
Just a whisper in the child’s heart:
“Don Eusebio… do you see?
I’ve found my mother…”
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