“Is she alive?” Elena asked, barely able to speak.
Daniel nodded.
“Yes, she is. She’s strong.”
A reunion she had longed for for years.
That same afternoon, Daniel took Elena to the small clinic where Sofía worked. The journey seemed endless. Elena clutched her rosary, torn between hope and fear. What if Sofía didn’t recognize her? What if she didn’t want to?
Inside the clinic, a young woman with braided hair looked up from the counter and smiled at Daniel.
Then she saw Elena.
Something ancient stirred.
Elena took a step forward. Sofía studied her face, her trembling hands, her eyes filled with years of longing.
“Mom?” Sofía said softly, as if that word had been waiting all this time.
Elena collapsed to her knees.
They embraced without hesitation. No explanation was needed. Their bodies remembered what time had tried to erase. They cried. They laughed. They clung to each other as if afraid to let go.
They talked for hours. About life. About loss. About love. Sofía showed Elena a worn rag doll she had found years before and treasured, never knowing why it meant so much to her.
Later, documents and tests confirmed what they both already knew. The news spread through the neighborhood, not as gossip, but as wonder.
Sofía chose to move to Mexico City to live with her mother. The bakery echoed with laughter once more. Elena learned how to send text messages. Sofía learned how to bake sweet bread.
A year later, they returned to Puerto Vallarta together. Hand in hand, they strolled along the boardwalk and placed white flowers in the sea. Not to say goodbye, but to symbolize peace.
Elena smiled, knowing this truth.
Even after the longest absence, love sometimes finds its way back.