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When Sergeant Alvaro Cifuentes stepped off the military bus in the small town of Borja , Zaragoza, after nearly ten months deployed on an international mission, all he wanted was to hug his twelve-year-old daughter , Lucia . Throughout the journey, he had imagined the moment: her running toward him, him lifting her in his arms, the old white house in the background. But that scene never unfolded.

His wife, Rebeca , wasn’t at the station. Neither was Lucía. Only the dry afternoon wind. Álvaro thought perhaps they hadn’t received his message confirming his arrival time, so he grabbed his backpack and walked the two kilometers to the house. But when he opened the porch door, something in the air chilled him to the bone. The house was silent, too silent.

Rebeca appeared from the kitchen with a forced smile.
“So soon?” she murmured, avoiding eye contact.
“Where’s Lucía?” he asked, with a concern he couldn’t quite explain.

The woman hesitated for a second.
“He’s… in the backyard. Playing, I guess.”

Álvaro dropped his backpack and crossed the street. When he opened the patio door, what he saw froze him in place. His daughter, whom he hadn’t seen in almost a year, was huddled in a corner of the yard , inside the old pigpen , wrapped in a dirty blanket. Her hair was tangled, her clothes filthy, and she had a look in her eyes that broke his heart.

“Lucía!” he exclaimed, running towards her.
The little girl slowly raised her head, as if expecting a scolding rather than a hug.
“Dad…” she whispered, and burst into tears.

He took her in his arms and felt the shudder of a body that had been trembling for hours. He looked around: there were no toys, no signs of “play,” as Rebecca had said. Only a bucket of dirty water, an old pillow, and a pungent smell that spoke of nights spent there.

It took Lucía a while to speak, but when she did, her voice was barely a whisper:
“Since September… she sent me here when you weren’t here. She said that… that I was in the way.”
Álvaro felt fury course through his body like a whip crack.

He entered the house with the child in his arms. Rebecca watched him from the table, her face rigid.
“I can explain,” she stammered.
“It’s in your best interest to do so,” he replied, barely containing his anger.

But before she could open her mouth, the front door burst open. A neighbor, Don Mateo, rushed in.
“Álvaro, you need to know something,” he said breathlessly. “This isn’t the first time… and it’s not just about Lucía.”

Álvaro felt his world crumble. Something much darker was about to be revealed.

Álvaro invited Don Mateo in and slammed the door shut. Rebeca took a step back, as if looking for a corner to hide in. Lucía, sitting on the sofa wrapped in a clean blanket, watched the scene silently, her eyes wide.

—Speak —Álvaro ordered the neighbor.

Don Mateo took off his cap and held it in his hands, nervously.
“I didn’t know whether to say anything to you… but after seeing you arrive and seeing the girl like that… I couldn’t keep quiet any longer.”

Álvaro felt a knot in his stomach.
“What did you see?”

The neighbor swallowed hard.
“For months now, your wife… well, your wife has treated the girl like she’s a burden. She’d send her out of the house, even when it was raining. Sometimes we heard her crying. A couple of neighbors wanted to intervene, but Rebecca always said it was ‘part of a strict discipline’ that you had approved.”

“That’s a lie!” Rebecca shouted, jumping up. “Mateo has always been against me!”
“Shut up,” Álvaro replied, not shouting, but with a firmness that made her stop. “Go on.”

“Not only that,” Mateo continued. “Three weeks ago, social services came to the neighborhood because someone sent them an anonymous message saying the girl was being abused. They couldn’t verify anything because Rebeca wouldn’t let them in.”
Álvaro felt his blood boil.
“An anonymous message? Who sent it?”
Mateo lowered his gaze.
“I don’t know. But someone tried.”

Rebeca put her hands to her head.
“Álvaro, I swear I only wanted Lucía to learn to be strong. That girl… she’s weak, she cries over anything. And you were never there. The entire burden of her upbringing fell on me.”

Álvaro could barely contain himself.
“And you thought putting her in a stable would make her strong? She’s my daughter, Rebeca!”

She took a step toward him, desperate.
“It’s my house too! And you have no idea how difficult it was to live with her!”

“Difficult?” Lucia’s small voice suddenly interjected. “I just wanted you to talk to me… to give me a goodnight kiss…”

Rebeca turned to the girl with a look of contempt that Álvaro found unbearable.
“You were never affectionate! You always looked at me like I was a stranger!”

Álvaro stepped between them.
“Lucía isn’t to blame for your frustration.”

Mateo took a deep breath.
“Álvaro… you should know something else. Rebeca wasn’t acting alone. The woman had frequent visitors when you were away. A man. Sometimes he came in through the back door.”

The silence fell like a dagger.
Álvaro looked at Rebeca, who paled instantly.
“Who was it?” he asked, with a dangerous calm.

She did not answer.

Lucía, her voice trembling, murmured:
“Dad… that man was yelling at me too. He said I shouldn’t be here. That he was going to live with you and Mom.”

The revelation opened an even deeper chasm in Álvaro’s heart. And at that moment he understood that what he had discovered was only the beginning. The damage to his daughter was far deeper than he had imagined.

Night fell on Borja as the tension in the house continued to grow like a wildfire that no one could extinguish. Lucía slept in Álvaro’s room, exhausted from crying. Don Mateo had left, but not before promising to testify if necessary.

Álvaro stood in the living room facing Rebeca. She tried to maintain her composure, but her face showed fear.
“Tell me who it is,” he insisted one last time.

Rebecca pressed her lips together.
“Just… someone who was helping me. It didn’t mean anything.”

“She helped,” Álvaro repeated, without raising his voice. “And she also helped mess with my daughter? She helped you kick her out of her own house?”

Rebecca raised her head defiantly.
“You don’t understand what it was like to live here alone. Everyone judging me. You were always away, and I was carrying everything. I needed support.”

“Support or escape?” he asked. “Because what you did isn’t a mistake. It’s abuse.”

She collapsed onto the sofa, sobbing.
“I… I couldn’t stand seeing her. She reminded me every day that I couldn’t have children of my own. That you never wanted to try again. And that man… that man made me feel important.”

Álvaro felt a deep, internal pain.
—That doesn’t justify what you did.

The argument stopped when they heard a noise upstairs. Álvaro ran to the room and found Lucía standing there, looking out the window, trembling.
“Dad… I thought you were leaving again.”
He hugged her tightly.
“I’ll never leave you alone. Never again.”

As they went back downstairs, he made a decision.
“Rebeca, we’ll talk to the Civil Guard tomorrow. And social services.
” “You can’t do that to me!” she shouted. “You’d ruin my life!”
“You almost ruined my daughter’s.”

The woman lunged at him, but Álvaro stopped her.
“I advise you to sleep and think carefully about how you want me to tell what happened. Because there will be an investigation.”

Rebecca realized she had no escape. That night she locked herself in the guest room.

The following morning, Álvaro spoke with the authorities. A report was filed. Social services examined Lucía and confirmed the state of neglect and psychological abuse. The identity of the man who visited Rebeca was also discovered: a seasonal worker from a nearby farm with a history of domestic violence.

The case moved quickly. Rebecca faced charges of abuse and gross neglect. The man was arrested for threatening a minor.

For weeks, Álvaro focused on helping Lucía rebuild her confidence. The girl began therapy and slowly started laughing again, eating better, and sleeping without nightmares. The entire town supported the father and daughter.

One afternoon, months later, as they walked together along the country road leading to the fields, Lucía took his hand.
“Dad… do you think we’ll ever live in peace again?”
He smiled, a mixture of sadness and hope in his voice.
“We’re getting there, sweetheart. Peace isn’t a place. It’s something you and I are going to build, one step at a time.”

Lucía rested her head on her arm.
—Thank you for coming back.

Álvaro looked at her with the deepest pride a father can feel.
“I’ll always come back. Always.”