Five years waiting for this day, five years of shouting his innocence to walls that never answered.
Now, just hours before facing his final sentence, he had only one request left.
“I want to see my daughter,” he said hoarsely.
“That’s all I ask.
Let me see Salomé before it’s all over.”
The younger guard looked at him with pity.
The older one spat on the floor.
“The condemned have no rights.
She’s an eight-year-old girl.
I haven’t seen her in three years.
That’s all I ask.” The request reached the prison director, a 60-year-old man named Colonel Méndez, who had seen hundreds of convicts pass through that corridor.
Something about Ramiro’s file had always bothered him.
The evidence was solid: fingerprints on the weapon, bloodstained clothing, a witness who saw him leaving the house that night.
parked in front of the prison.
A social worker got out, holding the hand of a blonde girl with large eyes and a serious expression.
Salomé Fuentes was 8 years old, but her gaze carried the weight of someone who had seen too much.
The girl walked down the prison corridor without crying, without trembling.
The prisoners in their cells remained silent as she passed by. There was something about her that commanded respect, something no one could explain.
When she arrived at the visiting room, Salomé saw her father for the first time in three years.
Ramiro was handcuffed to the table, his orange uniform worn and his beard overgrown.
Seeing his daughter, his eyes filled with tears.
“My little girl,” he whispered, “my little Salomé.” What happened next would change everything.
Salomé let go of the social worker’s hand and walked slowly toward her father.
She didn’t run, she didn’t scream.
Each step was measured, as if she had rehearsed this moment a thousand times in her mind.
Ramiro extended his handcuffed hands toward her.
The girl approached and hugged him.
For a full minute, neither of them said a word.
The guards watched from the corners.
The social worker checked her phone, paying no attention.
silently became sobs that shook his chest.
He looked at his daughter with a mixture of horror and hope that the guards would never forget.
“Is it true?” she asked, her voice breaking.
“Is what you’re telling me true?” he nodded.
Ramiro stood up so violently that the chair fell to the floor.
The guards rushed toward him, but he didn’t try to escape.
He screamed, he screamed with a force he hadn’t shown in five years.
“I’m innocent.
I’ve always been innocent.
Now I can prove it.”
The guards tried to separate the girl from her father, but she clung to him with a strength beyond her years.
“It’s time you knew the truth,” Salomé said, her voice clear and firm…
“It’s time.” Colonel Méndez watched everything from the observation window. His instinct, the one that had kept him alive for 30 years, screamed at him that something extraordinary was happening. He picked up the phone and dialed a number he hadn’t used in years. “I need you to stop everything,” he said. “We have a problem.” The security footage showed everything with brutal clarity. The silent embrace, the whisper, Ramiro’s transformation, the cries of innocence. The little girl repeating that phrase. Colonel Méndez played the video five times in a row in his office.
“What did he say to her?” he asked the guard who had been closest. “I couldn’t hear, Colonel, but whatever it was, that man changed completely.” Méndez leaned back in his chair. In 30 years, he had seen it all. False confessions, innocent people convicted, guilty people released on technicalities, but he had never seen anything like this. Ramiro Fuentes’ eyes, those eyes that had always filled him with doubt, now shone with something he could only describe as certainty. He picked up the phone and called the Attorney General.
closed five years ago.” Méndez stared at the frozen image of Salomé’s face. An eight-year-old girl with eyes that seemed to hold all the secrets in the world. An eight-year-old girl told her father something, something that transformed him. “I need to know what it was.”
The silence on the other end of the line lasted several seconds. “You have 72 hours,” the Attorney General finally said. “Not a minute more, and if this is a waste of time…”
Time will tell, your career will be the one to end. Méndez hung up the phone, went to his office window, and looked out at the prison yard. Somewhere in this case was a truth no one had wanted to see, and an 8-year-old blonde girl was the key to finding it.
200 km from the prison, in a modest house in a middle-class neighborhood, a 68-year-old woman ate dinner alone in front of the television. Dolores Medina had been one of the most respected criminal lawyers in the country until a heart attack forced her to retire three years ago. Now her days consisted of pills, soap operas, and memories of cases she could no longer solve. The news appeared on the 9 o’clock news segment. Dramatic scenes at the central penitentiary.
An inmate convicted five years ago in the Sara Fuentes case asked to see his daughter as his last wish. What happened during the visit forced the authorities to suspend the proceedings for 72 hours. Exclusive sources indicate that the eight-year-old girl whispered something in his ear that provoked an extraordinary reaction from the convicted man. Dolores dropped her fork. Ramiro Fuentes’ face appeared on the screen. She knew that face, not from this case, but from another.
Thirty years ago, another man with that same look of desperate innocence had been convicted of a crime he didn’t commit. Dolores was a novice lawyer then and couldn’t save him. That man spent fifteen years locked up before the truth came out. By then, he had lost everything: his family, his health, his will to live. Dolores never forgave herself for that failure. Now, looking at Ramiro Fuentes, she saw the same eyes, the same desperation, the same innocence that no one wanted to believe in.
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