It was a small cell phone, one of those old models almost no one uses anymore, wrapped in a small plastic bag and taped with medical tape to the inner lining of the burgundy dress. It wasn’t Rebecca’s. Or at least, not the one we all knew. The phone kept vibrating in Emiliano’s hand, with an alarm going off and a single word written on the screen: “ALMA.”
My legs felt like jelly. My name. My dead sister had hidden a phone inside her own body and programmed an alarm to go off during her own wake. Omar took a step toward us, a little too quickly. “Give it to me,” he said, in a voice that no longer sounded like he was mourning. It sounded like fear.
Emiliano retreated into the chair, clutching the phone against his stuffed dinosaur. I stepped between them without thinking. “Don’t touch him.”
The entire room filled with whispers. My mother began to pray louder, as if the Lord’s Prayer could hold her up. Omar tried to regain his role as the grieving widower. “That phone could be anything. Rebecca was very nervous lately. She was making things up.”
That was when I understood he already had a version prepared. My sister hadn’t just fallen down the stairs. According to him, she was also nervous, confused, and prone to exaggeration. The oldest way to erase a woman: make her seem unstable before anyone listens to her.
I took the phone carefully. It had little battery left, but it wasn’t locked. Upon opening it, a voice recording saved three days prior appeared. The same night Rebecca sent me that short audio message. I pressed play, my heart pounding in my ears.
My sister’s voice came through, soft and filled with ragged breaths. “Alma, if you’re hearing this, it’s because I couldn’t get out. Omar found the insurance papers and knows I changed the beneficiary. It’s not him anymore. It’s Emiliano. I also found transfers from Mom’s account to his. It wasn’t a loan. He stole from her.”
My mother let out a moan and covered her mouth. Omar shouted for us to turn it off, saying it was disrespectful to play audio at a wake. No one moved. The recording continued. “If he says I fell down the stairs, don’t believe him. The hallway camera recorded everything, but he thinks he deleted the video. There’s a copy in Emiliano’s dinosaur.”
We all turned to the stuffed toy. My nephew hugged it tighter, his eyes dry and enormous.
Omar lunged at the boy. This time, my cousin Javier caught him by the chest. There was a thud against the wall, a chair falling over, and an aunt screaming for someone to call the police. I took Emiliano by the hand and led him to my mother’s room. I locked the door while they argued outside. The boy wasn’t crying. That worried me more than if he had broken down. He sat on the bed, clumsily opened a seam in the dinosaur, and pulled out a USB flash drive wrapped in cotton.
“My mom told me that if she fell asleep and didn’t wake up, I should give this to you when it sounded,” he said. He handed it to me like it was something burning hot. “She also said not to believe my dad if he said she tripped.”
When the squad car arrived, Omar had already regained part of his performance. He was saying that we were hysterical, that the boy was traumatized, and that I was trying to make a scene out of a botched funeral. But the cell phone was in my hand, the memory drive in my blouse pocket, and half the family had heard the recording. An officer ordered the coffin to remain open until the District Attorney’s office arrived. Omar went pale. “You can’t do that. The burial is already arranged.” The officer looked at him with a coldness that gave me a breath of air. “Precisely because of that.”
My mother collapsed into a chair. I wanted to hug her, but Emiliano was still glued to my waist, and for the first time that night, I understood that my sister hadn’t just left me evidence. She had left me her son as an immediate responsibility.
At the police station, they played the memory drive. The video wasn’t long, but it was enough to change everything. It showed the hallway of Rebecca and Omar’s house. She appeared walking down the stairs with a folder in her hand. Omar reached her from behind. You couldn’t hear everything, but you could clearly distinguish when he said, “You are not leaving me with nothing.” Rebecca tried to pull away. He grabbed her by the arm. The struggle lasted seconds. Then she fell. It wasn’t a clean slip. It was a shove, rage, and then silence. Omar walked down quickly, stared at her, then looked toward the camera. That was where the file ended. The officer again ordered that no one touch the body without forensic authorization.
Before dawn, Omar was being held in custody, and Rebecca’s body was transferred for a deeper examination. Emiliano finally fell asleep on my lap, the empty dinosaur pressed against his chest. I couldn’t close my eyes. I thought about the burgundy dress, the hidden phone, and the sound my nephew waited for like someone waiting for their mother’s voice from the other side. When I thought nothing could get worse, the attorney who took my statement returned with another sheet. “Ms. Alma, we found a request for provisional custody filed by Omar two days ago. He alleged that Rebecca had episodes of instability and that you were a bad influence.”
I froze. Omar hadn’t just wanted to bury my sister quickly. He had also wanted to get his hands on Emiliano before the boy could speak.
Part 3:
The next morning, there was no funeral. There was the District Attorney’s office, forensic experts, calls, signatures, and a house full of empty chairs that still smelled of coffee, wax, and flowers. My mother didn’t want to remove the altar. She said that if we moved the candles, Rebecca would be left alone. I didn’t have the heart to argue with her. I just closed the door to the room where Emiliano was sleeping and began to organize what my sister had left scattered like breadcrumbs so someone could follow them: the hidden cell phone, the dinosaur’s memory drive, a life insurance folder, my mother’s bank statements, and printed screenshots of messages where Omar demanded money from Rebecca. Each paper showed me a part I hadn’t wanted to see. My sister wasn’t “nervous.” She was cornered.
The coroner confirmed previous injuries. Some old. Some recent. He also found marks on her arm consistent with the struggle in the video. Omar, through his lawyer, tried to say that Rebecca had attacked him first, that he only wanted to stop her, that the fall was an accident. Then he tried to use the recording in his favor, claiming that a woman who hid evidence at a wake was not mentally sound. But that strategy began to crumble when the DA’s office recovered deleted messages from his phone. In one, he wrote to a friend: “If she changes the insurance, she leaves me dead.” In another, he said, “The old lady stuck her nose where she shouldn’t have,” referring to my mother, because Rebecca had discovered that Omar stole money from her by signing fake receipts in her name.
Emiliano testified with psychological support. They didn’t leave him alone in front of strangers. They allowed me to be close, without intervening. He recounted that he heard shouting that night, that his mother asked him to hide in the bathroom and hug the dinosaur. He said that afterward, she came in for a moment, sewed something quickly into the doll with trembling hands, and told him: “If something happens to me, wait for the sound. Your Aunt Alma will understand.” My nephew didn’t see the fall, but he heard the thud. He also heard his father say a word that no child should ever keep in their memory: “Finally.” When Emiliano repeated that, the psychologist paused. I had to bite my lip to keep from screaming.
Omar’s custody request was suspended. I filed for temporary custody of Emiliano, and my mother, though broken, supported me. Omar’s family tried to appear then. They arrived with food, with tears, with speeches about how the boy needed “his father’s blood.” I met them at the gate. I told them that his father’s blood was being investigated for killing his mother. They didn’t come back that day. Later, they sent messages saying I was going to fill the boy with hate. I didn’t answer them. I didn’t want to fill him with hate. I wanted to fill him with security, something he had been lacking for far too long.
The process was long. Longer than any family can endure without breaking. There were postponed hearings, witnesses who didn’t want to get involved, neighbors who said they heard arguments but “weren’t sure,” and lawyers trying to smear Rebecca’s name. Omar lost weight, grew a beard, and learned to look at the judge like a repentant man. But every time his defense tried to turn my sister into a confused woman, another piece of evidence appeared: the copy of the video, the modified policy, the transfers, the audio from the phone, the documented bruises. Rebecca had been afraid, yes. But she wasn’t lost.
She was preparing her final way of defending her son.
When the sentence was handed down, my mother didn’t celebrate. Nobody really celebrates something like that. Omar received years in prison for Rebecca’s death and for family violence. An investigation was also opened for the theft from my mother and forgery of receipts. I felt relief, but not peace. Peace doesn’t come with a sentence. It comes in little pieces, later, when the child sleeps through the night again, when he stops asking if his father can get out through the window, when he allows himself to laugh without turning to see if someone is going to get angry.
Emiliano came to live with me. At first, he wouldn’t let go of the dinosaur, even though there was nothing inside it anymore. He slept with the lights on and woke up whenever any cell phone vibrated. That sound—the one that saved the truth—was also stuck in him like a fright. I took him to therapy. I went too, even though at first I said I didn’t need it. That was a lie. I needed it to forgive myself for not insisting when Rebecca sent me that audio. To accept that one doesn’t always manage to save the person they love, but one can take care of what that person protected until the end.
My mother’s house gradually began to have the noise of life again. Not the same noise. Never the same. Sometimes Emiliano helps water the plants. Sometimes he sits by Rebecca’s photo and tells her how his day was at school. My mother makes him hot cocoa like that night, but now she waits for him to ask for it. No one forces him to forget. We also don’t let him live inside the wake. Rebecca didn’t do everything she did so her son would stay glued to a coffin. She did it so he could leave that house without lies.
I kept the old cell phone, the USB drive, and the bracelet my sister wore on her wrist. Not out of morbid curiosity. As proof that even with fear, even knowing that no one might believe her in time, Rebecca thought. She prepared. She loved. That burgundy dress I hated at first ended up being my sister’s final safe. Omar thought he had dressed her to bury her quickly. He didn’t know she had already hidden the sound in there that was going to stop him.
Today Emiliano is eleven. Sometimes he still asks about his mother with a maturity that hurts. He asks me if she knew she was going to die. I give him the most careful truth I have: that his mother knew something could happen, and that is why she did everything so he wouldn’t be left alone with the lie. He hugs his dinosaur, already mended, and nods. He doesn’t always cry. Sometimes he just looks at the window, like he looked at the coffin that night, guarding a promise.
I never heard a cell phone vibration the same way again. Every time a phone rings on a table, my chest tightens. But I also remember that that small buzzing, dry and metallic, was the voice my sister couldn’t use after falling down the stairs. Everyone thought Emiliano was in shock when he asked not to cover the coffin. He wasn’t lost. He was fulfilling his mother’s last instruction. And thanks to that eight-year-old boy, who had more strength than all the adults in the room, Rebecca wasn’t buried as an accident. She was seen off with her truth wide awake.
