The Vázquez de Coronado mansion glittered with crystal light and polished marble. Yet for Jimena, 24 and thoughtful beyond her years, all that luxury felt like a corridor with no doors. Ever since her debut at fifteen, she had been measured by gowns, by scales, by glances that tallied what she was not. She was soft-cheeked and full-bodied, with honeyed eyes that warmed when she laughed. But the mirror her family held up to her showed only lack.
Her father, Don Patricio, was all ledgers and maps, a man who could calculate the worth of land down to the last arroyo. He looked at Jimena the way he studied harvest reports: what, exactly, could be extracted? Five of his children had married into advantage. One daughter, in his view, had not.
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