My name is Marina Salgado. I’m 62 years old, and with the savings of a lifetime I bought myself a small white house by the sea in Cádiz so I could retire in peace. It wasn’t luxurious, but it had a terrace with bougainvillea and a shed behind it where I planned to keep tools and bicycles.
I thought it was finally my turn to breathe.
One afternoon my daughter Lucía called me with a voice I didn’t recognize—cold, impatient.
“Mum, I need you to stay in the shed for a few days.”
“Excuse me?”
“I’m going to use the house for a party with my friends. And listen carefully: if you embarrass me, I’ll send you to a nursing home.”
I didn’t answer. I stared at the phone as if it weighed a pound.
Lucía had never been affectionate, but this was something else: a shameless threat, as if I were an old piece of furniture.
Still, I laughed.
Not because it was funny, but because I understood something: my daughter no longer saw me as a person, but as an obstacle.
That night Lucía arrived with bags, speakers, and two friends who didn’t even greet me. She pointed toward the shed with her chin. Inside it smelled of dampness and gasoline; there was an old mat and a bare lightbulb.
I clenched my teeth.
“Just a few days, okay?” she said, pretending everything was normal.
“Of course,” I replied calmly.
While they dragged boxes of drinks inside, I observed every detail: the speaker cable, the keys on the table, Lucía’s phone vibrating constantly.
I closed the shed door from the inside and breathed slowly. I was afraid, yes—but more than anything, I had clarity.
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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