After so much time.
I didn’t answer.
“I didn’t come here to ask for money,” he continued quickly. “Or the house. Or anything like that.”
I heard it.
—I came to… —he stopped—. To say that… I was wrong.
The silence dragged on.
—No—I said—. You weren’t wrong.
He frowned.
“You made a choice,” I continued. “And those choices have consequences.”
Her hands were trembling slightly.
“I know,” she said. “And I’m living them.”
That… was true.
—But I also know something else—he added—. If I don’t change now… I’m going to lose everything.
I stared at him.
—You already did it —I replied.
Her eyes welled up with tears.

But he didn’t leave.
He stayed.
“Then let me start from scratch,” he said. “Even if it’s with nothing.”
That’s when I understood.
Not because of his words.
But not because of its tone.
There was no demandingness.
There was no arrogance.
Just… honesty.
For the first time in a long time.
And that… changed something.
Not everything.
But something.
I got up slowly.
—I worked for forty years—I told him. —I started carrying sacks of cement. Sleeping on construction sites. Eating whatever I could.
He listened in silence.
—If you want to start over… you won’t do it in a glass office.
I swallowed.
—You’ll do it where it all begins.
I took a step towards the door.
—At six in the morning—I said—. At a construction site on the outskirts of the city.
I looked at him one last time.
—If you arrive late… don’t come back.
And I went in.
The next day…
At 5:52 in the morning, Diego was there.
Wearing borrowed boots.
Not knowing what to do.
But it was there.
And that… was the beginning.
Months later, people began to notice something.
A young man, covered in dust, working under the sun.
Quiet.
Constant.
Without bragging.
Without demanding.
Learning.
Charging.
Falling… and getting up.
Nobody knew who he was.
And that was exactly what I needed.
One day, at the end of the day, he sat down next to me.
“It’s more difficult than I thought,” he said.
I smiled slightly.
—It was never easy.
He looked at me.
—Now I understand.
I nodded.
And at that moment… we didn’t need to say anything more.
Because some things…
They are not explained.
They are being built.

A year later, Diego was no longer the same man.
It wasn’t perfect.
But it was real.
And that… was enough.
One day, he gave me something.
It was the clock.
The same one he had thrown that night.
Restored.
Careful.
“I want to earn this,” he said. “Not just have it.”
I took it.
And for the first time in a long time…
I felt something I thought I had lost.
No pride.
Not quite.
Something deeper.
Peace.
Because in the end…
I didn’t sell a house.
I did not destroy a life.
I only shattered an illusion.
For something real…
could be built in its place.
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