Paloma hit the bathroom floor so hard her knees rang against the marble.
For one wild second she thought she might faint.
Steam blurred the room.
The silver medal at his chest swung slightly where her trembling fingers had disturbed it, and that tiny movement made the past feel more real than the tiles beneath her hands.
Mr.
Zarate’s head turned sharply toward her.
“What happened?” he asked again, and this time the contempt was gone.
Paloma stared at the chain, then at the crescent birthmark below his collarbone, then at the face she had not allowed herself to picture in years because remembering had once hurt more than hunger.
When she finally spoke, the name came out like a wound opening.
“Andrés.”
He went very still.
No one in the house called him that.
No one in the business world called him that.
Even his legal files listed him as Mateo Andrés Zarate, but only his mother had ever used the second name in daily life, and she had been dead for twenty-two years.
His eyes narrowed.
“How do you know that name?”
Paloma lifted her face slowly.
“Because twenty years ago,” she whispered, “you put that chain around my neck in the rain and told me storms never lasted forever.”
The color drained from his face so completely it startled her.
For the first time since she had entered the estate, he looked less like a powerful man and more like someone whose body had been ambushed by memory.
He searched her features with frantic disbelief.
The hollows in her cheeks were deeper now.
The softness of youth had been worn away by work, children, grief, and survival.
But her eyes were still the same eyes that had once looked at him from behind the laundry house near the coast, bright and defiant and impossible to forget.
“Paloma?” he said.
The way he said it nearly destroyed her.
She stood too fast, nearly slipping, and backed toward the door.
“I need air.”
She fled the bathroom before he could stop her.
Teresa Vidal, the silver-haired woman from the café, found her in the service corridor three minutes later, leaning against a wall with both hands pressed to her mouth.
Teresa did not waste time pretending not to understand.
“You know him.”
Paloma looked up, eyes wet.
“I knew someone by that birthmark.
By that chain.
I knew someone your family said left me behind.”
Teresa’s expression turned grave.
“Come with me.”
She led Paloma to a small sitting room near the back staircase, closed the door, and poured water she didn’t ask Paloma to take.
Then she sat opposite her and folded her hands.
“Mateo was called Andrés by his mother and by a few people from his childhood,” Teresa said.
“After his father died, he stopped using it.
Very few remember.”
Paloma laughed once, but there was no humor in it.
“I remembered.”
Teresa studied her for a long moment.
“Were you the girl from Santa Aurelia?”
Paloma’s chest tightened.
“So he did tell someone I existed.”
“Not in the way you think.
He talked about you once when he was twenty.
Then his father sent him abroad and the subject disappeared.
I always suspected Alonso Zarate had done what wealthy men do when their sons fall