Carmen had connections at a rural clinic, a mortuary worker who owed the family money, and a local official willing to sign whatever landed on his desk if the envelope was thick enough. They used another body after the crash, one badly burned and hard to identify, pushed through paperwork under Sofía’s name, and hurried the closed-casket funeral before anyone could ask why the records shifted from one office to another so strangely. When Sofía’s injuries healed enough for her to stand, they told her the outside world believed she was dead and that if she tried to tell anyone the truth, they would have you declared unstable and take everything that remained of the land before killing you quietly enough that no one would ever know where to pray.
For a while, Sofía resisted.
She screamed. She clawed at doors. She refused to eat. She tried to escape through a bathroom window once and cut her leg so badly they stitched it themselves to avoid taking her to a hospital. Each time she fought, Carmen tightened the world around her: fewer blankets, less food, more pills, more lies, more reminders that you were fragile and alone and one wrong move away from ruin. Mateo played the gentler monster, bringing soup, saying he still loved her, saying he was only doing what was necessary until she “calmed down enough to sign.” Evil always preferred a soft voice when it wanted to be remembered as reasonable.
The chain on the wall was added after her second escape.
That is what Carmen meant by “again.”
When you hear it, something in you turns so cold you stop shaking. For five years you fed this man. For five years you thanked God for him in your evening prayers because you believed he had loved your daughter well enough to keep loving you after she died. For five years, while Sofía counted cracks in concrete and measured time by footsteps overhead, Mateo sat in your kitchen and asked whether you needed aspirin.