My drunk nephew called me “the sad aunt who buys affection,” and my whole family laughed. That same night, I closed my wallet, canceled the apartment, froze the cards, and the next day they were the ones crying at my door. I did not shout.
I did not complain. I did not explain anything. I simply let the Robles family discover how much it cost to mock the only person holding them up.
Sunday smelled of grilled meat, warm tortillas, and resentment disguised as a joke.
Lucía Robles was forty-two years old, financial director of a medical technology company in Santa Fe, Mexico City.
She had two cell phones, a full schedule, an apartment in Polanco, and a dangerous habit: solving other people’s problems before they learned to take responsibility for themselves.
She paid Mateo’s tuition. The rent for his apartment near the university. The repairs on her brother Andrés’s car.
Her father’s medicine. The repairs on the family house. The “emergencies” of Paola, her sister-in-law, which always began with tears and ended with a transfer.
Lucía did not brag about it.
She believed that was love. She believed if she could help, she should.
Mateo, her twenty-one-year-old nephew, was sitting across from her with his cheeks red from cheap tequila, his shirt open, with that loose laugh of someone who has never paid rent but talks as if he has already suffered enough.
Then Mateo raised his glass.
“Oh, Grandma, don’t worry. You already know Aunt Lucía is the sad aunt who buys affection.”
The table did not fall silent.
That was the worst part.
Andrés let out a dry laugh. Paola gave Mateo a little tap on the arm, but she was smiling. Doña Carmen covered her mouth pretending to be scandalized, though her eyes wrinkled with laughter.
Lucía’s father shook his head and kept eating.
Lucía felt the wine taste like metal.
The sad aunt who buys affection. Not the aunt who paid. Not the aunt who was there when no one else could be.
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