The Night of the Rain
The rain didn’t just fall; it punished the earth. It hammered against the windshield of my Range Rover with the rhythmic violence of a thousand tiny fists, blurring the world into streaks of neon and charcoal. I gripped the leather steering wheel until my knuckles turned white, a strange, premonitory tension tightening between my shoulder blades.
I had driven six hours straight from the capital, fueled by caffeine and the childish excitement of a surprise visit. I hadn’t told them I was coming. I wanted to see the look on my mother’s face when I walked through the door of the colonial-style house I had bought them three years ago.
It was my crowning achievement—the brick-and-mortar proof that Miguel, the son who left to build an empire, hadn’t forgotten where he came from. I turned the corner onto Maple Street. The wipers slashed back and forth, fighting a losing battle against the deluge.
My foot hovered over the brake. Then it slammed down. The house—their house—was dark.
Not the cozy, sleeping dark of eleven o’clock at night, but a hollow, abandoned blackness. The windows were unblinking eyes, devoid of curtains. But that wasn’t what stopped my heart.
Across the street, huddled under the flimsy canvas awning of a closed bakery, were two figures. They looked like piles of discarded laundry in the dim streetlamp glow. A shopping cart sat beside them, covered with a black garbage bag that whipped furiously in the wind.
I didn’t park. I abandoned the car in the middle of the street, the door open, the engine running. The rain soaked me instantly, ruining my Italian suit, but the cold I felt had nothing to do with the weather.
I ran toward them, my boots splashing through puddles that looked like oil slicks. “Mom? Dad?”
The figures stirred.
The smaller one looked up. My mother’s face was a map of devastation, pale and streaked with water that might have been rain or tears. She was shivering so violently that her teeth chattered an audible rhythm.
My father, a man I had once thought invincible, looked shrunken, his arm wrapped protectively around a plastic bin. “Miguel?” he rasped, his voice cracking. He didn’t sound relieved.
He sounded terrified. “What are you doing?” I shouted over the roar of the storm, dropping to my knees on the wet pavement. “Where are your keys?
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