A Commander Found Her Own Portrait in a Family That Denied Her-eirian

The lawyer said, “Commander Vega, your father, General Ortega, is dying.” But my parents had been dead for thirty years.

For a moment, I thought the sentence had entered the wrong room.

My office at the base was narrow, functional, and aggressively ordinary, with two filing cabinets, a framed commendation, one metal desk, and a window that looked over a courtyard where young officers crossed in straight lines because someone had taught them that straight lines meant discipline.

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The air smelled of printer toner, cold coffee, and the faint mineral sharpness of floor polish.

The fluorescent light over my desk hummed with the patience of something that had no intention of stopping.

I had been reviewing a supply transfer report when the phone rang.

The number was from Madrid.

I almost let it go to voicemail because unknown numbers had never brought me anything worth interrupting a day for.

Then I answered, and a man with a careful legal voice asked if he was speaking to Commander Lucía Vega.

I said yes.

He introduced himself as an attorney representing the private affairs of General Alonso Ortega of Segovia.

Then he told me my father was dying.

The word father landed in the room like an object thrown through glass.

I told him he had made a mistake.

He said my name again.

Not just Commander Vega.

Lucía Vega.

He spoke the name slowly, as if he had read it from paper rather than memory, and something in that precision made my skin tighten beneath the collar of my uniform.

“My parents died when I was a child,” I said.

There was a pause on the line.

Not surprise.

Recognition.

“I understand that is what you were told,” the lawyer said.

That was when another voice cut in.

Male.

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