Finally, the family returned to Mexico City, burdened with unanswered questions. For Elena, hope refused to die. She printed flyers. She visited organizations that helped families searching for missing loved ones. She traveled whenever someone said they had seen a girl who resembled her daughter.
Years passed.
Her husband, Javier, became quiet and withdrawn. Stress consumed him. He died three years later, leaving Elena alone in her small bakery in the Roma Norte neighborhood. People admired her strength. She opened the shop every morning. She baked sweet bread. She smiled at the customers.
But every night, he whispered Sofia's name like a prayer.
Life goes on, even when you don't want it to.
Elena never believed her daughter was gone forever. In her heart, Sofia was still alive somewhere. Growing. Learning. Waiting.
Eight years after that day at the beach, Elena sat in the doorway of her bakery on a sweltering April morning. The aroma of freshly baked pastries wafted out onto the street. An old pickup truck pulled up and a group of young people got in to buy water and cakes.
He greeted them politely, barely looking up.
Then her gaze froze.
One of the young men had a tattoo on his arm. Simple lines. The face of a little girl. Big eyes. Braided hair.
Elena felt her blood run cold.
She knew that face. She had memorized it in dreams, photographs, and prayers. Her hands began to tremble so much that she had to lean against the doorframe to keep from falling.
Gathering the last drop of courage he had left, he spoke.
"My son," he said softly, "that tattoo... who is it?"
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