Part 2, Chapter 6 Minerva 1949 Now Minerva's doing the talking. A friendly driver named Rufino takes them to visit their husbands in prison. Summary Minerva tells of her boredom at home after she graduates from school, and she goes on drives to get away from the house. After the girls' deaths, a family servant, Fela, begins channeling their spirits for visitors, including Minerva's daughter, Minou. Minerva meets Sinita Perozo, who tells her how Trujillo destroyed her family—killing her uncle… On one of her drives she discovers Papá … Dede is transported back to 1943, to "a clear moonlit night before the future began." In 1938, Patria and Minerva go to Inmaculada Concepcion as boarding students. The whole family is out in the front yard under the anacahuita tree, relaxing and telling stories. The official flirts with her but tells her to come back tomorrow. Dede begins an interview with a woman at around three o'clock. On their fourth trip, the … By now, the “butterflies” are national symbols of the resistance. When Dede asks her what she wants to know, the interviewer answers, "Tell me all of it." It is 1994. She also realizes that something is amiss between Mama and Papa. By now the “butterflies” are national symbols of the resistance. Minerva helps the old man in front of her in line, who has thirteen sons, all with the same name (to make the regime harder to pin a crime on one), but by the time it is Minerva’s turn the day is over. A friendly driver named Rufino takes them to visit their husbands in prison when need be. Patria had lost her faith after the death of her baby, but when she sees all of the pilgrims praying she hears the Virgin Mary speaking to her. She is bored and jealous of Elsa and Sinita, who are studying in the capital. She asks her father if she can go to the university, but he wants her to stay around for her parents. The men are moved to a remote prison in an attempt to force the sisters onto a desolate patch of land. Minerva has been living at home for a few years, and rumors are starting about her being a lesbian.