“I don’t care who you know. I have proof.”
She slammed the phone down and turned to find Mateo watching her from the doorway.
“Who was that?”
“No one important. Go to bed, Mateo. You’ve had enough.”
He wanted to press, but the alcohol had already thickened his thoughts. He collapsed onto the sofa and was asleep in minutes.
What happened next, Mateo would never consciously remember.
But Elena did.
She woke to the sound of the front door opening.
Barefoot, she padded into the hallway.
From the shadows she saw a man step inside—a man she knew very well. The one who always wore navy blue shirts and brought her little packets of candy when he visited.
Uncle Javier.
Laura’s voice rose in surprise, then fear.
Then a dull thud.
Silence.
Elena slipped into the hallway closet, trembling, heart hammering against her ribs.
Through the slats she watched her uncle move toward the living room where her father slept.
Clara spent the entire night poring over the Vargas case file.
Hundreds of pages, crime-scene photos she forced herself to look at, forensic reports, witness statements—everything pointed to Mateo.
Yet the cracks were there, subtle but real.
The key eyewitness, a neighbor named Luis Morales, first told police he saw “a man” leaving the house around 11 p.m. Three days later, in a follow-up statement, he suddenly identified Mateo by name. Why the sudden certainty?
The forensic results—normally backlogged for weeks—came back in just 72 hours, perfectly timed for the arrest.
The prosecutor who handled the case? Victor Salazar.
The same last name as the neighbor who changed his story.
Clara dug deeper.
Victor Salazar was no longer a prosecutor. Three years after securing Mateo’s conviction, he had been appointed judge—an unusually rapid rise.
And in the five years since the murder, Judge Victor Salazar and Javier Vargas had quietly become partners in several real-estate transactions—properties that once belonged to Mateo and Laura’s family.
Clara picked up her phone.
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