I was sitting in our cramped rented room in El Paso, Texas, facing Sophia, my wife, the woman who had walked with me through every hardship. My name is Diego Morales, thirty‑three years old, an ordinary auto mechanic whose hands are always stained with grease and sweat. That’s the man I am today.
Sophia is thirty, with bright eyes and a gentle smile, working as an elementary school teacher at a nearby public school on the Texas side of the U.S.‑Mexico border. On the table between us lay a thick stack of bank loan documents, numbers scribbled everywhere, the kind of official forms that made my head spin but also filled me with hope. We were going through each item, line by line, calculating whether we’d finally saved enough for the down payment on our very first house.
“I think if we cut back a little more on groceries, we might have enough next month,” Sophia said softly but firmly. She was always like that—optimistic yet realistic—and it made me feel incredibly lucky to have her by my side. I nodded, but in my mind, that house wasn’t just four walls and a roof.
It was the destination of a long, tear‑soaked, sweat‑drenched journey that had really begun on a fateful night fifteen years earlier, when I was thrown out at eighteen. Every time I thought about it, my chest still tightened like an old wound that had never fully healed. But that evening in El Paso, with the West Texas sun fading outside and the desert wind rattling our thin window glass, I decided to tell Sophia everything so she would understand who I really was—and so I could finally face that past one more time.
“I’m going to tell you everything tonight,” I said quietly. Sophia looked up from the loan documents, concern in her eyes. “Everything?”
“Everything,” I said.
“Beginning with the night my parents told me I wasn’t really their son.”
I had just turned eighteen. It was a sweltering summer day in El Paso, the kind where the sun scorched your skin from dawn to dusk and the asphalt on the street shimmered. I’d been working at the auto shop since early morning, arms and back aching from tightening bolts, changing tires, and wiping down engines.
But it was my birthday, so I’d treated myself to a tiny cake from the bakery near the shop. It wasn’t anything fancy, just a small vanilla slice with white frosting and one crooked little candle in a plastic bag. To me, it was a rare joy.
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