By the moment Lucía raises herself a little higher beneath the blanket and uses her own head to cut off that razor-thin sliver of light, every trace of drowsiness vanishes from you. Your heart pounds so violently you are sure whoever stands beyond the door could hear it through the wood. You still do not understand what is happening, but one truth lands with instinctive certainty: Lucía is not in your bed because she is odd.
She is there because she is shielding someone.
The strip of light holds for two more seconds.
Then it slips away.
A faint rustle follows in the hallway, so slight it could be mistaken for pipes settling or a draft moving beneath the eaves. After that, silence settles—dense and absolute—like a hand pressed over the house’s mouth.
Lucía continues to hold your fingers.
She does not grip tightly. She simply rests her hand over yours, warm and steady beneath the blanket, until your breathing slows enough not to betray your panic.
Beside her, your husband Esteban remains asleep, one arm thrown across his pillow, his chest rising and falling with the maddening calm of a man who has heard nothing at all.
When Lucía finally lets go of your hand, she does not whisper. She does not sit up. She only settles back against the mattress and stares into the darkness as if willing morning to come.
You stay upright a moment longer, your back rigid, your mouth dry, your thoughts racing for explanations and finding none that make sense.
At dawn, Lucía is already in the kitchen.
She stands at the stove in one of her simple cotton dresses, stirring a pot of oatmeal as if the night had been uneventful. Pale morning light spills through the narrow window and catches in the loose strands of hair around her face. If not for the memory of that light slicing across your bedroom wall, you might have convinced yourself it had all been a dream.
You linger in the doorway, watching her.
She notices you before you speak.
“Coffee’s ready,” she says without turning.
You stay where you are. “Who was outside our room last night?”
The spoon stills.
Just for a beat—long enough to confirm what your body already sensed—her hand pauses over the pot. Then she resumes stirring.
“I don’t know what you mean,” she says.
You almost laugh.
Not because anything is amusing, but because bad lies have a recognizable shape, and you are looking straight at one now.
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