The Hidden Locket That Exposed Sophia Beltran’s Stolen Life-felicia

My name was Sophia Beltran for twenty-four years.

That was what my school records said.

That was what my driver’s license said.

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That was what my mother whispered when she tucked me into bed as a child and touched the Virgin Mary locket at my throat as if she were checking that I was still there.

I had no reason to question it at first.

Children do not inspect the foundations of their lives.

They just live inside them.

My mother, Claire Beltran, worked hard and worried harder.

She cleaned houses, translated documents for neighbors, hemmed dresses on weekends, and never let me leave the apartment without making the sign of the cross over my forehead.

She was not dramatic in public.

At home, she could be funny in small flashes, singing along to old songs while stirring soup or laughing when I rolled my eyes at her warnings.

But there were certain subjects that emptied her face.

Pennsylvania.

Fire.

My father.

Robert Sterling.

Robert was introduced to me as my mother’s older brother, the man who had helped us when nobody else would.

He wore tailored suits and smelled like expensive soap, peppermint, and the inside of a leather briefcase.

He was a lawyer with a Beverly Hills house, polished manners, and a way of touching people lightly on the shoulder that made them feel selected.

At church, women called him generous.

At restaurants, servers called him kind.

At family tables, people fell quiet when he spoke.

My mother told me he loved me like a daughter.

She said it so often that the sentence became a rule.

“Your Uncle Robert loves you like a daughter.”

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