I’m sixty-eight years old, and for the past four years I lived in my son Daniel’s house with his wife, Laura, on the outskirts of Valencia. After my husband passed away, I sold the small apartment where we had spent much of our lives to help Daniel settle a debt he never fully explained. He promised it was only temporary—just a few months until things improved. But months turned into years, and slowly, my role in that house shifted from mother to something closer to an unwanted presence.
I cooked, cleaned, took my granddaughter Inés to school, and quietly contributed to groceries with what little remained of my pension. I never complained. I told myself that family is family, that at a certain age you learn to swallow your pride for the people you love. What they didn’t know was that, two weeks earlier, I had bought a lottery ticket almost out of habit—and won an unbelievable prize: eighty-nine million euros. At first, I thought I was mistaken. I checked the numbers again and again, then verified them at another office, and finally with a lawyer who specialized in managing large fortunes. It was real. Suddenly, the woman they treated like a burden had the power to vanish—or to transform lives.