Before the teller could do more than nod, the bank doors opened again. Four officers entered. No rush. No panic. Walking with the quiet certainty of one who already knows the end.
Ramirez got out of the unmarked car and my chest tightened as if my body wanted to run even though I wasn’t the one being chased.
Inside, an officer calmly approached Andrés.
“Andrés Maldonado?” the officer asked.
Andrés’ smile faltered. He blinked once, confused, as if he thought it was a parking ticket. “Yes?” she said, forcing a natural tone.
“Sir,” the officer said, “you are under arrest for attempted aggravated fraud and conspiracy.”
The color disappeared from Andrés’ face. For a second, he looked exactly the same as he had been under the bed when he thought he had won: confident and untouchable. Then panic set in. He tried to run.
It wasn’t a spectacular sprint. It was three frantic steps. He didn’t succeed. An officer grabbed his arm and roughly turned him around, his wrists already tied behind his back. The handcuffs made such a loud noise that the people in the checkout line turned around. The customers just stared. The phones came out. The whispers spread like wildfire.
Andrés, my husband, married three hours before kissing my best friend, was standing there in the middle of a bank lobby, handcuffed like the criminal he was. He opened his mouth to speak.
“No,” Ramírez said sharply. “Save it.”
