You don’t “reward” Lina like she’s a hero in a movie.
You do something more serious.
You ask her what she wants, what her future looks like beyond survival.
She says she wants to finish nursing school without working three jobs.
She says she wants to protect kids who get trapped in rich family wars, the ones nobody believes because money makes lies look clean.
So you build something with her, not out of guilt, but out of purpose.
A foundation in Aurelia’s name, focused on protecting children from financial exploitation and family abuse, with legal aid and medical advocates and safe placements.
You put Lina in charge because she earned it the hard way.
And you sign the papers with hands that no longer tremble from grief alone, but from gratitude too.
Not gratitude that she saved your money.
Gratitude that she saved your sons.
On the first anniversary of Aurelia’s death, you don’t throw a lavish memorial.
You sit in the nursery with your boys on your lap, their warm weight anchoring you to the living world.
Lina stands in the doorway for a moment, hesitant, like she’s afraid to intrude.
You wave her in and she sits with you on the floor, exactly where it all began.
No cameras. No screens. No surveillance.
Just three living hearts and one absent one still shaping the room.
You whisper into the quiet, “I’m sorry I didn’t protect you,” not sure if you’re talking to Aurelia or to the version of yourself that failed.
And then you add, softer, “But I will now.”
Mateo yawns and presses his forehead to your chest.
Samuel grabs your finger with a grip strong enough to hurt.
And the nursery fills with something you thought you lost forever.
Not silence.
Home.
THE END
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