The words landed in the room like a stone dropped into still water.
Ramira closed her eyes for a moment as if reliving the night that had destroyed her life.
“”I told them that,”” she whispered. “”But no one listened to me.””
Méndez stood up slowly, his mind already revisiting the trial file that had seemed so complete.
There had been a witness who claimed to see Ramira leaving the house.
Fingerprints on the knife.
Blood on her clothes.
All the pieces had fit too perfectly.
Maybe too perfectly.
“”Who else was there?”” Méndez asked the girl carefully.
Salomé looked directly into his eyes, and something in her gaze made the seasoned officer feel unexpectedly uneasy.
“”My uncle Mateo,”” she said.
Ramira gasped.
The name struck her like lightning because Mateo had been her husband’s younger brother, the man who had testified during the investigation claiming he arrived after the crime had already happened.
“”No…”” Ramira whispered, shaking her head slowly.
But Salomé continued.
“”I saw him that night,”” the girl said quietly. “”He told me to stay in my room and not come out because adults were talking.””
The social worker straightened immediately.
“”Salomé, you never mentioned this during the investigation,”” she said, her voice now tense.
Salomé lowered her gaze slightly.
“”No one asked me what I saw,”” she replied simply.
Those eight words made the air in the room feel heavier.
Méndez rubbed his chin slowly.
He remembered reading that the girl had been asleep during the incident.
That assumption had been accepted without questioning.
“”What exactly did you see?”” he asked again.
Salomé took another breath.
“”I woke up because they were arguing,”” she said. “”My father was shouting, and Uncle Mateo was shouting louder.””
Ramira’s hands began trembling again, but this time from shock rather than despair.
“”What were they arguing about?”” Méndez asked.
“”Money,”” Salomé answered. “”And something my father called a betrayal.””
The colonel felt a cold sensation crawl along his spine.
The official report had stated the victim, Ramira’s husband, had been attacked suddenly without warning.
No mention of an argument.
No mention of Mateo being present earlier.
“”Then what happened?”” Méndez asked slowly.
Salomé’s voice became even quieter.
“”I heard something fall… like a chair,”” she said. “”Then my father shouted once more, and after that everything became quiet.””
Ramira covered her mouth, tears flowing again.
“”Oh God…”” she whispered.
Salomé looked at her mother and continued speaking gently.
“”When I opened my door a little, I saw Uncle Mateo holding the knife,”” the girl said.
The room froze.
Even the guards stopped breathing for a moment.
“”He saw me watching,”” Salomé continued. “”He told me if I said anything, you would go away forever.””
Ramira collapsed back into the chair, shaking violently.
Five years.
Five years believing her daughter had slept through the nightmare.
Five years never knowing the child had been carrying the truth alone.
Méndez’s mind was already racing through the legal consequences unfolding in front of him.
If the girl’s testimony was accurate, the entire investigation had been built on a manipulated timeline.
Mateo had placed Ramira at the scene while hiding his own presence.
And Ramira’s fingerprints on the knife suddenly made terrible sense.
“”He forced me to pick it up,”” Ramira whispered suddenly, remembering something she had buried under years of trauma. “”He said if I didn’t, he would hurt Salomé.””
The colonel’s expression hardened.
Everything was beginning to connect.
Mateo had manipulated the crime scene before calling the police.
And the system had accepted his version because it matched the evidence.
Evidence he had arranged himself.
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