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Feb 04, 2026

Millionaire arrives early at Casa de Campo… and almost faints at what he sees

A child's laughter always sounds the same, anywhere in the world: pure, unexpected, capable of breaking even the harshest routine. That's why, when Alejandro Montalvo stepped out of his car at the hacienda near San Cristóbal, hearing that hearty laugh in the middle of the afternoon, he felt something inside him shift, as if his heart didn't know whether to beat or stop.

He had come from Mexico City in an impeccable suit, his mind full of numbers, and carrying a leather briefcase that smelled of airports, meetings, and exhaustion. He had decided to arrive early without warning, guided by instinct, solely by the desire to see his son before the day slipped away amidst phone calls. However, the first thing he saw upon crossing the garden was a scene so unbelievable it nearly shook him to his core.

Leo, his six-year-old son, was clinging to a woman's back, laughing as if the air were tickling him. It wasn't Carla, his elegant fiancée who spoke sweetly in front of doctors and friends. She wasn't a therapist or a nurse with diplomas on the wall. She was Elena, the housekeeper: simple blue uniform, yellow gloves, grass-stained knees, crawling across the lawn making horse-like noises, while Leo wrapped his arms around her neck, happy.

Alejandro felt his legs give way. It wasn't just the laughter; it was the way Leo looked at her, with those brown eyes that were so reminiscent of his deceased mother's. Life in his hands, vigor in his body… Five neurologists, expensive treatments, cold reports: they had all told him that Leo was disconnected, that physical contact upset him, that emotion was an empty reflex. Carla told him the same thing every morning: “Honey, we have to increase the dose. He got aggressive again today.”

But in the garden there was no aggression, no crisis, no emptiness. There was a child who, for the first time in years, seemed simply… a child.

The crunch of Alejandro's shoes on the grass broke the spell. Elena froze and carefully put Leo down, trying to put some distance between them, but the boy wouldn't let go: he clung to her sleeve and protested with a human sound. Elena swallowed hard and knelt down without looking up.

"Mr. Alejandro… I… I'm sorry. I didn't know you'd be here so early. He just wanted to play a little. Please don't be angry."

Alejandro didn't answer. He looked at his son, and Leo, instead of hiding, stood in front of Elena with his arms raised, as if protecting her. That small gesture struck her chest with unbearable guilt. Her son, who had been told he didn't recognize anyone, had just chosen who to care for.

"Since when?" Alejandro asked, his voice hoarse.

"Since forever, sir…" Elena whispered. "Well… since I've been here. Six months. Shy at first, yes, but he's not stunted. Just sad and scared."

“Scared of what?” The question seared Alejandro.

“Not of what… but of whom,” Elena said, trembling.

Alejandro remembered the “accidental” bruises, the muffled crying when Carla entered, the obsession with the drops, the insistence on sedating him “for his own good.” Carla’s hand resting on the boy’s neck during the appointments now seemed… too calculated.

He returned to the mansion with a racing heart. The house had been a museum of grief since Elena’s death two years ago; the triplets, Sofía, Valentina, and Camila, had fallen into a silence that hardened Alejandro, as if his soul had been encased in ice.

But that afternoon, as he crossed the threshold, the ice cracked. In the center of the grand hall, a young woman in a black uniform and white apron knelt before the triplets, who were laughing like never before. It wasn't a timid laugh: it was a roar that came from the depths of her being. The girls ran to the young woman and clung to her skirt.

Alejandro felt his breath catch in his throat. A poisonous mixture of jealousy, humiliation, and fear ignited in his chest. He took a step forward.

"What does this mean?" his cold voice echoed off the marble.

The girls clung to the young woman. Six identical eyes stared at him as if he were a stranger. The tension was unbearable.

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