Mauricio’s hand is still raised. Carmen is still on the marble floor trying to pull her screaming daughter against her chest. The two lawyers behind your nephew are already arranging their faces into that polished expression wealthy families pay for when something ugly threatens to become public.
Sofía’s stuffed rabbit lies by the wall where he kicked it, one soft ear twisted beneath itself, and for one terrible second the whole room narrows into that single point in time when everyone expects cruelty to continue.
Then your voice cuts through the silence.
“Put her down.”
The words come out rough and splintered, dragged through a throat that has spent too long locked behind pain, pride, and the cold stillness that grows when a man begins mistaking power for permanence. Even you barely recognize the sound. But in that room, it lands harder than a gunshot.
Mauricio freezes.
So do the lawyers.
Carmen lifts her tear-streaked face from the floor and stares at you in disbelief. Little Sofía hiccups once against her mother’s shoulder and turns toward you as if even she understands that something impossible has just happened.
The effort of those two words costs you more than anyone can see. Fire tears down your spine. Your hand trembles violently on the armrest. But none of that matters as much as the change in Mauricio’s face—the first clean fracture in a confidence built entirely on your silence.
“Tío…” he says.
You hate how weak it sounds on him.
For six months he has walked through your home like a man measuring curtains before the funeral. He has sat in your office, spoken over your head, directed staff, shifted routines, and slid papers in front of you while believing your body had become a doorway only he could walk through.
Now the doorway answers back.
“Put,” you say again, slower, the word scraping through pain, “her… down.”
Mauricio lets go so fast Carmen nearly misses the catch.
Sofía collapses back into her mother’s arms, sobbing. Carmen curls around her on the floor, shaking. You cannot move fast enough to help them, and the helplessness strikes you so hard it nearly blinds you. Then it becomes something else.
Fury.