That night, Aitana gave a full statement to a deputy, carefully presenting the evidence her grandfather had preserved. The next day, she took everything to a journalist named Renata Cruz, who had been investigating suspicious land deals for years. What Aitana brought filled in the missing pieces. Over the next five months, the story unfolded into a major exposé, revealing a widespread fraud operation that had stolen land from multiple families.
The consequences were swift. The notary at the center of the scheme was arrested, along with Fausto, while Aitana’s mother faced charges of her own. As the case unraveled, Aitana’s conviction was finally overturned. Standing in court, she listened as the judge cleared her name—a moment she had held onto through years of silence and endurance. For the first time in over a decade, she was truly free.
The land itself remained complicated, tangled in years of fraudulent sales and legal disputes. Though she couldn’t recover everything, Aitana worked with a lawyer to reclaim what she could. More importantly, her grandfather’s records helped other victims begin restoring what had been taken from them. His quiet effort to document the truth had not only saved her—it would help many others.
Months later, Aitana returned to the root cellar one last time. Wearing her grandfather’s silver chain, she reflected on the care he had taken to protect her, even after his death. She thought of Jacinto’s long silence and loyalty, and of the families whose stories were finally being heard. Then she stepped back into the open desert air, carrying not just the weight of the past, but the clarity of someone who had fought for the truth—and found it.