Sofía feels a strange pull. She closes her eyes, and the archive melts away.
Inside is a single sepia photograph of a young man, no older than 18, standing in front of a grim factory in Manchester, 1842. On the back, in faded pencil: “Joaquín, el que soñó con el vapor.” Libro Historia Del Mundo Contemporaneo 1 Bachillerato
Sofía watches history tear them apart. Matteo joins Garibaldi’s Expedición de los Mil and fights for a popular republic. Carlo becomes a diplomat for Cavour, trading Nice and Savoy to Napoleon III for military support. When Italy is finally unified in 1871, it is a monarchy, not a republic. Matteo is arrested for sedition. Carlo weeps as he signs the arrest warrant. Joaquín, heartbroken, writes one last line: “The nation is born. The people are still waiting.” Sofía feels a strange pull
Years later. Sofía finds Joaquín again, now a graying exile in the office of a newspaper in Turin. It is 1859. He is writing articles supporting Il Risorgimento —the unification of Italy. He has two young sons: Matteo (idealistic, believes in Garibaldi and the Camisas Rojas ) and Carlo (pragmatic, admires Cavour and the cunning of the Realpolitik ). On the back, in faded pencil: “Joaquín, el