You had braced yourself for judgment there, for the old eyes, the old whisper, the shape of your name turning people cautious. Instead you sit listening while the truth you carried alone for a decade is spoken aloud in neat legal sentences and given back to you as context rather than stain.
The judge orders a competency review.
Not as punishment. As correction. Two weeks later, the psychiatric panel finds what Dr. Ferrer already knew. You are not unfit for the world. You are a woman who learned too young that the world rewards violent men and cages the women who stop them too loudly.
Release becomes official.
The first morning after the order, you wake not inside San Gabriel or inside Lidia’s house of fear, but in a small apartment above a bakery run by Alma’s aunt. The windows stick when it rains. The shower moans before hot water arrives. The smell of bread climbs the stairs before dawn every day like a blessing no institution ever figured out how to manufacture.
Lidia and Sofi visit often.
At first, your twin startles easily. Door slams still empty her face. She apologizes when she laughs too loudly or eats too little or forgets something harmless. Trauma does that. It turns ordinary space into a room full of invisible furniture your body keeps bruising itself against. But slowly, almost stubbornly, she begins to return to herself.
Sofi changes fastest.
Children heal in bursts, not lines. One week she still ducks at raised voices. The next, she is drawing houses with open windows and two women standing in the yard with the same face. She calls you Tía Nay with an awe that makes you want to laugh and weep at once, as if you are part person, part story she will tell later when someone asks when things started getting better.
You get a job at the bakery.