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. Lucía is many things: quiet, helpful, modest to the point of self-erasure. But she has never been careless. Every word she speaks feels measured first. Hearing her feign ignorance with such effort tells you the truth is far larger than a strange noise in the night.
“You took my hand,” you say. “And you moved your head into the light.”
Lucía sets the spoon aside. When she finally turns, her eyes carry the look of someone already worn out before the day has begun. “Please,” she says softly, “not here.”
The answer frustrates you more than denial did.
Not here. In this house, nothing is ever here. Nothing is ever spoken where it happens. Fear moves from room to room wrapped in chores and silence and polite explanations about village customs and the need for warmth. You have been living with inconvenience for over two weeks, enduring the neighbors’ gossip, the strain on your marriage bed, the slow humiliation of knowing people imagine things about your home that no decent family would want imagined.
“Then where?” you ask.
Lucía flicks her gaze toward the stairs.w
Upstairs, you hear your mother moving in her room on the second floor, the faint thud of a dresser drawer closing. Esteban is still asleep on the third floor—or pretending to be. Your younger brother Tomás, Lucía’s husband, left before sunrise for his shift at the parts warehouse. The house is waking the way houses always do, in fragments, and suddenly you resent the timing of ordinary life.
“Tonight,” Lucía says. “On the roof. After everyone’s asleep.”
You should insist on now.
You should demand answers in daylight, in the kitchen, surrounded by cabinets, clean dishes, and practical objects that could stand as witnesses. But something in Lucía’s face stops you. It is not stubbornness. It is fear stretched thin enough to resemble courtesy.
So you nod once.
“Tonight,” you say.
All day, the house feels staged.
Your mother comes downstairs in her robe, complaining about her knee and asking if there are eggs left. Esteban appears ten minutes later, scratching his chest, kissing your cheek, complaining that he slept poorly even though you know he slept like a rock. When he sees Lucía at the stove, his expression shifts so quickly you almost miss it. Not desire. Not irritation. Something far stranger.
Recognition.
It lasts less than a second.