PART 1
“If your daughter wanted to show off, then let her learn not to overshadow the birthday girl”, my mother told me, as if she had just justified the unjustifiable.
I arrived at my sister Marisol’s house at almost eight at night. I had been leaving a heavy shift at the General Hospital of Querétaro, with swollen feet, a wrinkled uniform and guilt stuck in my chest for not having been able to accompany my daughter Sofía to her cousin Valeria’s party.
Valeria turned twelve years old. Sofia was eleven.
That morning, before leaving, Sofia was happy. She had gotten up early, took a bath, chose her yellow dress and asked me to help her adjust her hair. Her hair was long, curly, beautiful. For her it was not vanity. It was something she cared for with love, like someone caring for a part of herself.
The night before I took her to a real salon, not to the corner aesthetic where they always cut unevenly. I paid more than I could, but when she looked in the mirror with her defined curls, a side braid and small pearls holding her hairstyle, I understood that she was worth every peso.
“Do you think Vale likes it?”, he asked me.
“You look beautiful, my love. Of course you’re going to like it.”
She also carried a gift she had made: a little box decorated with diamond, full of bracelets that she had knitted during the week.
I left her at Marisol’s house confident. It was my family. My mother Carmen, my father Ernesto, my sister, my nephews. What could happen?
When I got through it, the door opened and Sofia came out.
For a second I didn’t recognize her.
Her hair was gone. Not like before. He had it cut with scissors, uneven, with strands at chin level and others almost attached to his ears. It seemed like someone had torn him apart in rage.
She walked looking at the floor. Her eyes were red, her breathing was short, and her hands were clenched against her dress.
“Sofia… what happened?”
He tried to smile, but broke down.
“They cut it off, mom.”
I felt like the world went out of my way.
“Who?”
“My grandmother… and Aunt Marisol.”
I hugged her as she cried to my chest. He told me he wanted to go home, but something inside me turned cold.
“Not yet.”
I went in with her. Marisol was collecting disposable plates as if nothing had happened. My mom cleaned the table and my dad ate cake sitting on the couch.
“What did they do to my daughter’s hair?”
Marisol wasn’t even ashamed.
“We asked her to make a ponytail. Did not want. Then we cut it off.”
“Excuse me?”
My mom sighed.
“Don’t make drama, Lucia. It’s just hair.”
Marisol added, her voice full of poison:
“Valeria was crying. It was her birthday and your daughter arrived as if she were the queen of the party. What did you want us to do?”
I looked at Sofia. He trembled.
I did not scream. I didn’t break anything. I just took his hand and we walked out.
But as I closed the door, I heard my dad say:
“This is how the conceited is lowered.”
And there I understood that this was just beginning.
I couldn’t believe what was about to happen…