The Factory Folder That Exposed Why Uncle Ramiro Went To Prison-lequyen994 - Chainityai

The Factory Folder That Exposed Why Uncle Ramiro Went To Prison-lequyen994

When Uncle Ramiro walked out of prison, nobody in my family behaved like a man had come home.

They behaved like a problem had been released.

He stood at the curb with a black trash bag in one hand, torn shoes on his feet, and a face so tired it made him look older than my grandmother.

Image

Our front door stayed shut.

The curtains moved because people were watching from inside, but nobody wanted to be the first person seen forgiving him.

My grandmother refused to come out of her bedroom.

My cousins had already made it clear that their homes were closed to him.

My dad stood in the living room window and said, “I don’t want that thief anywhere near my family.”

I was fifteen years old, and I believed him because children usually believe the loudest adult in the room.

Everyone had told me the same story for as long as I could remember.

Ramiro had robbed a warehouse full of money.

Ramiro had ruined the family name.

Ramiro had almost killed a guard.

Ramiro had gone to prison because he deserved it.

Then my mom walked past my dad, opened the front door, and ran barefoot into the street.

She crossed the road without looking both ways.

She threw her arms around Ramiro so hard the black trash bag slipped from his hand and hit the pavement.

“Forgive me, brother,” she said into his shoulder.

That was the first crack in the story I had been given.

I did not understand it then.

I only knew that guilty men were not supposed to be hugged like victims, and my mother was not supposed to cry as if she had been waiting years to apologize.

After that day, Ramiro lived in the tin shed behind our house.

My dad called it charity with a lock on it.

My mom called it temporary.

Read More