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Mariana and I had been married for seven years. It was a time filled with both laughter and tears. When we fell in love, we believed that our love would last forever, but life doesn’t always follow the path we imagine. My work was devouring me, the distance between us was growing, and after several unsuccessful attempts at reconciliation, we decided to let go of each other’s hands.

On the day of the divorce, Mariana simply whispered,
“Don’t feel guilty, maybe we don’t walk at the same pace anymore.”

I was silent, then I left. There were no arguments, no reproaches, just a silent ending. I always thought that with time, we would each rebuild our lives, and that, who knows, one day we might get together and smile like two old friends.

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But things didn’t go the way I imagined.

A year after the divorce, my work brought me back to the city where Doña Carmen, my ex-mother-in-law, lived. I remembered how much she had loved me like a son, so I decided to visit her. Deep down, I even hoped that Mariana might be there, and that we could have a quiet conversation after all this time.

I stopped in front of the door, with a strange nervousness. The door opened, and Doña Carmen looked at me with a mixture of surprise and deep sadness in her eyes. In a trembling voice, she said to me:
“My son… You’re back.

I went in. The house had remained the same, but the atmosphere was strangely silent. In the living room, on the table, there was a picture of Mariana, framed with a black ribbon. I froze, my heart paralyzed.

“Mamma… It’s…? I stammered.

Doña Carmen sighed, her voice breaking:
“Mariana left us almost six months ago.

I couldn’t breathe. I felt the earth give way under my feet. I didn’t want to believe it, but Doña Carmen’s tear-filled eyes said it all.

I sank into the chair, my mind empty. Why didn’t anyone tell me? Why did I learn it so late?

As if she guessed my distress, Doña Carmen placed an envelope in my hands:
“She asked me to keep it.” She said that if you ever came back, you should read it.

With trembling hands, I opened the envelope. Mariana’s handwriting appeared before my eyes, each word piercing my chest like a dagger.

“My love, if you read this letter, it may be that I am no longer here. Forgive me for not telling you about my illness. I didn’t want to be a burden, I didn’t want you to look at me with pity, or for your life to remain tied to mine. I just wanted you to keep moving forward, to make your dreams come true… and if you can, may you forgive me for having left you in silence. I have never ceased to love you; I only regret that our fate was so short. »

I held the letter to my chest as the tears flowed non-stop. The world was crumbling into a thousand pieces, leaving me alone with unbearable pain.

Mariana had left in silence, taking with her all this unfinished love. And I—the one who had shared seven years of his life—I didn’t even know it.

That evening, I lit incense in front of his portrait. With my heart in tatters, I murmured:
“I have returned…” but too late. If another life exists, I promise to be by your side and to walk with you all the way that we have not been able to finish here.

The secret that Doña Carmen had kept taught me one thing: sometimes what we lose is not just a person, but a part of our own heart. And there are things that, if we don’t value them in time, we will never have the chance to find again.