Of the three brothers, she chose the one who wore a mask. During the honeymoon, he took it off and she was left speechless.
The ultimate arrived with the appearance of a costly failure, already a sign of defeat.
In the main bedroom of the Lomas de Chapultepec motel, the air smelled of antiseptic, but it could not overcome the smell of shad wood and a silver hamburger.
Amira Salgado was standing with her back straight and a leather folder pressed firmly against her chest like a shield.
The heart rate monitor showed a slow rhythm, as if time were running out loud.
“Sign the fusion, Amira…” she said in a hoarse voice. “Before dawn.”
“I can defend myself in court,” he replied coldly and precisely. “I have lawyers in London, in New York…”
He let out a dry sound, more like a ball breaking than a laugh.
“The time for the courts is over. You need a surprise… and a rigging.” His surprisingly strong fingers squeezed his wrist.
“The government is waiting for my last breath to socialize everything. It will say ‘stability’, it will say ‘I have a male heir’.”
And what I have built… it will devour.”
Amira felt the cold air in her mouth. It was a negotiation, a scheduled execution.
—I am not a liquid active.
“You are my heir.” His eyes, clouded by illness, met hers with a desperate clarity. “Heiresses do not possess the luxury of romanticism.”
They had the duty to survive. The Alsaba family offered their three children.
I am the only powerful force capable of silencing bureaucrats and protecting your name. Choose today.
Amira swallowed.
“Three?” he asked, even though he already knew the answer.
“Khalil, Amar, or Zafir.” Doï Hassaï closed his eyes for a second, exhausted. “The peacock, the glutton, or the mobster. It’s all the same to me. Just… make sure that tomorrow the sky rises above the towers that still belong to you.”
Amira left the bedroom with the feeling that she had just signed a part of her soul, even though she had touched a little piece.
The ballroom of the Seve Star Hotel, owned by Salgado, shone like an open jewel.
Enormous chandeliers hung from the ceiling, projecting arches over gorges adorned with diamonds. The smiles were sharp and delicate.
Everyone knew why he was there.
Amira descended the main staircase wearing a modern light blue silk cafta, embroidered with silver. Elegant. Sober. An armor.
At the foot of the stairs, the three Alsaba brothers were waiting for her, as if they were pieces of a display case.
Khalil, the eldest, was the first. Exaggeratedly handsome, with a beard trimmed with geometric precision and teeth that were too white.
He took Amira’s hand and kissed the air above her hips, impregnated with musk and vapor.
—Amira… your face turns pale when you appear —he said in a heavy voice for the cameras.
Meanwhile, his eyes searched for the prey. He searched for flashes. He searched for angles. He searched for the spectacle.
—I’ve already ordered the presidency to be ready. Combined with our capital… we could buy that archipelago in Greece that you mentioned in that interview. We’d be the golden couple on magazine covers.
Amira felt her stomach churn.
Amar, the youngest, turned around with his shoulder, with the smile of a rich kid who had never heard a “o”.
“Forget about Greece,” he said, speaking as if it were evocative.
Think about strength, Amira. With me, you don’t have to worry about anything. I’ll take care of the money… and you focus on looking beautiful. That’s how it works.
Empty, turned into gold.
Amira smiled slightly, said the right thing and outwardly felt trapped.
I need air.
He slipped between diplomats and associates, crossed a side corridor and emerged onto the terrace where a garden of windshield wipers formed a labyrinth of shadows and flowering jasmine.
The noise from the drawing room faded until it became a distant buzz.
He reached a small marble fountain and placed his hands on the cold rim, trying to breathe.
A voice came from the darkness, from under a metal palm tree.
—I flee from your own authority.
It was a high-pitched voice. But it was a deep voice. A rough and profound baritone that vibrated in his chest.
Amira suddenly got up.
At the stop, almost invisible, a man dressed completely in black was seated. His clothes were simple, tailored, or fashionable.
The most usual: upa pashmipa tradicioпal cυbría пo sólo su cabeza, siпo tambiéп su rostro, dejaпdo пicameпte upa raпυra doпde la oscυridad ocυltaba sus ojos.
“Who’s there?” she asked, regaining her composure and adopting the role of director, or prisoner.
“The third option,” he replied.
Amira felt a chill that she didn’t have anything to do with life.
-Sapphire?
The name was a rumor in that city. A legend. A ghost that had been seen for three years.
They said his mother died in a plane crash. They said he survived “damned”, burping and deformed.
They said that his face was so monstrous that the children cried when they saw it. They said a thousand things to justify the morbid fascination.
“Are you hiding here because the light scares you?” he challenged him.
He let out a slow sigh.
—Hypocrisy disgusts me. The light there only illuminates lies.
He pointed to the room that was behind the glass.
—My brothers saw you as a safe, wandering animal. I hoped your father would die and tame you.
The audacity shook her.
“And what do you see?” she replied, crossing her arms.
Zafir didn’t move. It was a statue made of shadow.
“I see a woman calculating the price of her own soul.” He paused. “You don’t need a husband, Amira. You need a partner.”
The way he said it… it was fulfilled. It was a challenge.
“He says you’re a mobster,” he whispered.
“The world says many things to justify its fears.” He lowered his voice slightly. “Perhaps so.”
Zafir se pυso de pie.
He was tall. Much taller than his brothers. Broad shoulders. Imposing presence.
He didn’t respect himself, he didn’t respect himself, he simply existed.
—If you choose me, there will be magazine covers. There will be silence. There will be the burden of living with a map that doesn’t show its face.
Will you be able to… share a bed without knowing who with?
Before Amira could answer, a sweet and sweet voice was heard from the door.
—Αmira.
Khalil had opened the terrace. The light from the hallway spilled onto the garden, and Zafir immediately retreated into the shadows, as if the lack of light hurt him.
“Te estamos esperaпdo”, dijo Khalil, igпoraпdo el mapa oscυro como si fυera υп mυeble. “Tυ padre le pregυпtó al botario.
The contract is on the center table. It’s showtime!
Amira looked at Khalil’s perfect smile… and felt disgust.
Then he looked towards the shadow where Zafir remained immobile, if I tell you, if I invite you to convince you, simply… present.
He returned to the living room without saying a word.
The room remained silent when Amira stood in front of the ceremonial table.
The botanist was sweating nervously and offered him a golden feather.
Khalil and Amar stood on either side, like peacocks that already felt like cleaners. The camera flashes blinked silently.
—Miss Amira Salgado —said the civil judge, with the microphone in place—. Which legacy do you choose to honor and protect?
Khalil took a step forward, chest puffed out and a victorious smile on his face.
Amira picked the pepper.
She looked at the crowd, at the superficial glitter of that society that would judge her no matter what she did.
And his eyes rested on the trail of the garden.
There stood Zafir, a man standing on the golden frame of the room.
Amira breathed a sigh of relief.
—I choose the only map that told me the truth.
The murmur began like a wave.
—I choose Zafir Alsaba.
A glass shattered on the floor. Someone let out a stifled cry. Khalil pressed his lips together in fury.
“You’re crazy!” he whispered, grabbing her wrist tightly. “That animal… that…!”
Amira let go as if her hand were burning.
—Al meпos пo iпsteпtó comprarme coп mi propio diпero, Khalil.
He signed. One blow. Another. Dry. Decisive.
The co-strate was sealed.
In the living room, the heiress had simply chosen darkness.
That night, the silence in the armored limousine was heavier than the cloth covering the face of the map that was sitting next to him.
Zafir didn’t speak. He didn’t celebrate. He didn’t boast. He simply existed, as if Amira’s decision were a vow with real weight.
Arrive at the eastern end of the Alsaba Palace, the ancient part, with its Moorish arches and its deep shadows.
The servants avoided that corridor as if it were occupied.
The royal chamber was enormous. A canopy bed, almost ceremonial, seemed to await a sacrifice.
When the door closed, Amira remained in the middle of the Persian rug, waiting for the worst: a roar, a complaint, some brutality.
Zafir approached the widow and removed his ceremonial cloak. Beneath his head, a black shirt accepted the weight of his back.
“Are you trembling?” he asked, not mockingly. Just watching.
“I’m waiting,” she said excitedly. “They told me I married a mobster. I’m waiting for the faggots.”
Zafir turned slowly. Her face was still covered.
He approached until he was an arm’s length away. His presence absorbed the air in the room.
“Words are like vileness, Amira.” He raised his hand. His long, calloused fingers paused at her cheek without touching it, barely tracing the air. “You chose the only one who didn’t want to sell you a fantasy.”
He lowered his hand and, to his surprise, walked away towards a sofa in the corner.
“Turn off the main light,” he said. “Darkness is more insidious.”
“Were we… in agreement?” Amira asked, her voice a little treacherous.
Zafir lay back, still dressed, as if setting limits.
—You will have my name to protect your inheritance. You will have my sword to protect your life. But you will not have my body… nor my face. Not until you see what others see.
He remained quiet.
—Go to sleep, ma’am. The war starts tomorrow.
The war started with weapons, if it was with ipk.
For days, the newspapers, fueled by their bad opinions, published headlines: “Beauty and the murderer,” “The heiress who married a murderer.” It said that Zafir had killed a maid and that the fabric concealed the scars of her crime.
Shareholders calmed down. The share price faltered.
In each encounter, Khalil looked at her with feigned pity.
“How is your… husband?” she asked, as if she were talking about a sick dog.
Amira dυró υпa semaпa.
Until an hour later, he entered the library through the east corridor and threw the tablet onto the table.
“Tell me the truth!” he demanded. “Did you hurt anyone? Are you hiding because you’re dangerous?”
Zafir closed her book calmly. His silence was driving her crazy.
“I don’t care about the role,” she said with all the accumulated frustration. “What matters to me is that I’m fighting alone, while you hide here like a ghost. If we’re partners, I need to know who you are. If you’re a mobster… I have the decency to show you your teeth.”
Zafir stood up as if that phrase had just been pressed like a key.
He took her by the wrist, firmly but without hurting her, and pulled her out.
He got into an old jeep, escorted, and driven away from the luxury, heading for ancient streets, places of worship, and an atheistic poise.
They stopped in front of a building with a stove that was passing by and had a sign. Laughter could be heard nearby.
-What is this?
“The truth,” he said, opening the door.
And everything the world said about “the mobster” collapsed.
The sleeping child headed towards Zafir.
Don’t be afraid.
With joy.
Orphans. Children with scars, with crutches, with a hug and eyes. He clung to him as if it were home.
A pineapple with the popped eye touched her covered face with her fingers. Zafir didn’t move. She held her hands with a hand that broke something near Amira.
An older woman approached her and whispered:
He calls Him the Invisible Father. He put up this roof. He pays for the food. His brothers hastened to the cars; He hastens to the lives.
Amira saw Zafir put a child on her shoulders. And she stood there, ashamed and relieved:
He did not hide to conceal the evil.
She hid to conceal her daughter, because in that world the daughter was weak… and beauty was a weapon.
Days later, fate tore away another part of the veil.
Amira was sleeping well. Before dawn, she went out onto the terrace and heard a sharp, rhythmic whistle.
In the exercise yard, Zafir practiced with a curved sword.
He was wearing only shorts. His bare torso glistened with sweat. Every movement was a symphony of muscles and precision.
Amira remained motionless.
There was no deformity. There were no marks. There were no monsters.
Only force.
Zafir turned around and a gust of wind lifted the loose fabric from her face for a moment. Amira saw something that touched her heart: a perfect jaw, defined lips, soft skin.
Beautiful.
Really beautiful.
He stepped back impulsively and hit a jar with his elbow. The soup exploded in the silo.
Zafir reacted immediately, grabbing the cloth and pressing it against his face, as if the world could kill him just by looking at him.
He said nothing. He simply turned around and disappeared into the shadows of the palace.
Bpd Bmira understood why the legend had arisen: it was to hide anything.
It was to hide something that aroused the worst in others: desire, envy, hatred, wars.
The final blow came when he least expected it.
A desert exploration trip ended with sabotage: the jeep stopped, the fuel ran out. A sandstorm was approaching like a wall.
No sign. No rescue.
Zafir dragged her towards the rocks, covering her with his body while the witch tore at their jump. Something hit him. He felt her muffled groan.
—You’re hurt.
Zafir tried to downplay it, but his body gave way.
Amira tore the edge of her blouse, cleaned the wound with water and rinsed it. Her fingers cracked with a new electric fever.
“Why does he hate you so much?” he asked almost in a voice.
“Because I’m a broken mirror,” he replied. “With me around, they can’t pretend to be good.”
Zafir had a fever. She needed to drink.
Amira lifted the hood.
—I can’t give you water like that.
He hesitated… and loosened the cloth just a little. He revealed his mouth, his throat.
Amira gave him a drink with firm hands even though his body was trembling.
Then he looked up.
For the first time, Amira saw his eyes completely: golden. Liquid amber. Beautiful and sad like those of a wounded animal that had learned to live alone.
Amira proпυпció sυ пombre como υпa oracióп.
Zafir grabbed her by the neck and pulled her towards him, millimeters.
“If you do this… there’s no going back,” he whispered. “If I’m yours, I’m everything. And I wouldn’t be the same.”
“I don’t want to go back,” he said.
They were about to kiss when the sound of a helicopter crossed the desert.
Lights. Shadows. Reality returns like a blow.
Zafir was covered in new material.
“He has come to collect corpses,” he said coldly. “We are going to disappoint them.”
Upon arriving at the palace, the air was bad.
Too many guards. Bathing suits at half-mast.
Khalil and Amar awaited them with theatrical duel and triumph in their eyes.
“With deep sorrow,” Amar said, showing a document, “we inform you that your father died tonight.”
Amira felt that the world was being implicated.
Zafir hugged her.
Khalil was buried in a large cemetery.
—And furthermore… your husband will be arrested. We have proof. Ideological fraud. Co-conspiracy. And, unfortunately… escape.
The guards attacked Zafir.
Amira screamed.
Zafir, somewhat disheartened, just stared at his office with that impossible calm. In his eyes there was a promise: trust her.
And they led him into darkness.
There, Amira understood that her choice had not only been dangerous.
I had whistled correctly.
Now, for the first time, I was going to fight for towers for money.
She was going to fight for a map that was hidden out of shame… but so that the world wouldn’t devour it.
The super bus had gone up.
But Amira’s war had barely begun.