“DON’T TOUCH HIM,” THEY WARNED YOU. YOU BOUGHT HIM ANYWAY… AND THAT NIGHT YOU LEARNED WHY MEN WOULD RATHER BURN THEIR SILVER THAN KEEP HIM CLOSE.

One afternoon, seeking anything that might help, you open a chest of your father’s old documents in the back room of the main house. Don Gaspar de Alvarín was a man who kept records like weapons, neat stacks of paper that could ruin a rival without raising his voice. You flip through brittle pages, letters, land surveys, and the kind of quiet confessions men write only when they believe no one will read them. Dust rises, light slants through the shutters, and the house feels like it’s holding its breath. Then you see a name that makes your fingers go cold. Not just “Nahuel Itzcóatl,” but “Nahuel Itzcóatl Alvarín.” The surname is a blade sliding between your ribs. Your father’s surname. Your surname by birth. The world tilts, and for a moment you hear nothing but your own heartbeat. The realization is sickening and clarifying at once: you didn’t bring a stranger into your hacienda. You brought blood.

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