You open your mouth to deny it, but you remember the early days. The investors. The backroom meetings. The threats disguised as offers. The way you learned to buy silence because silence was cheaper than war. You remember one name, and the memory tastes like metal.
Letícia says it before you can. “Marcos Vieira,” she spits, and the room goes cold.
Your fists clench. Marcos had been your partner before he became your enemy, the man who smiled while he planted knives. “He’s gone,” you say. “I pushed him out years ago.”
Letícia’s eyes sharpen. “Now he is,” she agrees. “But back then he wasn’t. Back then he came to me.”
Isabela’s head snaps up. “He came to you?” she repeats. “Why?”
Letícia’s hands tighten on Isabela’s shoulders, not hurting, just bracing. “Because I was carrying you,” she says softly, and Isabela freezes, the sentence hitting her like a wave she didn’t see coming.
You stop breathing. The world reduces to one detail: Letícia just told the girl she is the baby. The baby you lost. The baby you thought never existed beyond an ultrasound photo and a dream.
Isabela’s voice trembles. “What are you saying?” she whispers. “Mom, what are you saying?”
Letícia kneels beside her, eyes level with hers, and the air in the room feels fragile, like a glass ornament held over stone. “I’m saying,” Letícia says, “your father is Eduardo.”
Isabela turns slowly to look at you. Her eyes search your face with the same survival instinct she had in the rain, but now it’s mixed with something else: betrayal, curiosity, yearning, and a furious need for truth. “No,” she says, like she can refuse reality into changing shape. “That’s not… that’s impossible.”
You want to reach for her, but you don’t. You keep your hands on your knees, palms open, showing her you are not a threat, even if your existence just became one. “It’s true,” you say quietly. “I didn’t know. I swear to you, I didn’t know.”
Isabela’s breath comes fast. “Then why wasn’t he here?” she throws at her mother. “Why did I grow up like this? Why did you let me think he was some stranger in the world?”
Letícia closes her eyes, and when she opens them, the tears are there but they don’t fall yet. “Because Marcos told me he would destroy Eduardo,” she says. “Not with lawsuits. With blood.”
Your spine stiffens. “He threatened you?” you ask, voice dangerously calm.
“He threatened you through me,” Letícia corrects. “He told me if you found out about the baby, if I stayed with you, he would make sure you lost everything. He would ruin your company, frame you, bury you in scandals, take your freedom. And then he said something worse.”
Isabela’s voice is small again. “What?”
Letícia swallows. “He said he would make sure you never met your daughter,” she says. “Because dead dreams are easier to control than living ones.”