The Real Garcia Chapter 03
Daniel Harrington sat in a leather wingback chair. He was elderly now, heavyset, wearing a dark wool blazer.
But I recognized him instantly. That face, those brows. Exactly like the faded photograph I had looked at for thirty years.
“Professor Harrington.” I sat down across from him.
He sipped his coffee, then looked up. “Ms. Smith. I have looked into you. A girl from the rural West, already so accomplished. Impressive.”
He poured me a cup of coffee. “I came from the rural West too. I know how hard the struggle is. Whatever your concerns, I can assure you that Isabelle easily meets your standards. Say yes, and I promise you will go very far in this field.”
His tone was light, patronizing. The ease of a man who had been powerful for decades.
He looked at me with a smile.
He did not recognize me. Not a flicker of recognition. Though everyone said I bore a strong resemblance to my grandmother.
He had no idea I existed.
“Professor Harrington.” I met his eyes. “You also came from the rural West. I’m curious. How many people did you trample over on your way up?”
His smile vanished. The coffee cup clinked sharply against the saucer.
“What exactly do you want?”
What did I want?
I turned the words over in my mind, and a smile formed on my lips.
I wanted to go back fifty years. To the day he left my pregnant grandmother in that farmland. He stole her name and the documents she needed to move to the city. And he left with another woman.
My grandmother was branded a whore. Trapped in that backcountry for life.
My mother was born a bastard. The school would not let her in the classroom because her mother was “dirty.” She sat outside for two years, listening through the wall, until the teacher chased her off.
She never went to school. At thirteen, she started sewing for others. Her fingers bled from the needles and became covered in scars.
Two generations. Two pairs of ruined hands. They lifted me out of that forgotten farmland, through law school, to this chair.
I had been waiting for this moment.
I stared at his face. “I want justice, Professor Harrington. And I have already sent out the offer list. Isabelle is not on it.”
The coffee shop fell quiet.
He looked at me. I looked at him. Across fifty years of rot.
He snorted coldly. “Little girl, you’re ungrateful. I came here to show you respect, but you have chosen the hard way. Don’t blame me.”
He stood, buttoned his jacket, and walked out.
I sat there, watching his back disappear. The coffee in front of me had gone cold.
That night, the firm’s website posted an emergency announcement.
Former partner and interviewer Evelyn Smith maliciously interfered with normal hiring, damaging educational fairness. She was terminated.
No investigation. No evidence. Just a few lines and my photo.
But the comment section exploded.
A flood of reactions poured in.
“She made partner so young? Probably slept her way up.”
“She picked the wrong family to mess with.”
“This is how educational fairness gets destroyed.”
I read them one by one, quietly.
My phone would not stop ringing. Insults, messages. Two from Isabelle Harrington.
“Evelyn, how does it feel to lose everything? Look in the mirror. You’re nothing. You can’t touch me.”
“Tomorrow, the firm is holding a press conference for me. I will walk into this profession in broad daylight. And you? You will never work in this industry again.”
The glow of the screen lit my face.
I stared at those words for a long time. Then I turned the phone over.
My mother sat beside me, her back turned. Her shoulders shook. Those hands, sewing for half a lifetime, tugged at her sleeve. Her knuckles were white.
“Evelyn,” her voice cracked. “Maybe let it go.”
I took her hands. These were the hands that had carried me out of the farmland, covered in needle scars, rough as sandpaper.
I held them for a long time.
“Mom, we didn’t do anything wrong. They have owed this debt for fifty years. It is time to collect.”

