“She acts like she doesn’t exist, and those are the dangerous ones.”
At first, Emiliano had ignored it.
But doubt is strange.
It doesn’t break down the door.
It slips through the cracks.
And once inside, it starts to change everything.
Soon he found himself reliving moments that had never bothered him before.
The way Rosa knew exactly how Martina liked her sandwiches.
The way Daniela would run to meet her first thing after school.
The way both girls seemed more at ease with Rosa than with anyone else in the house.
Before Patricia’s accusations, those things would have seemed like kindness.
Afterward, they looked different.
Suspicious.
Threatening.
Mistakes. So Emiliano made a decision.
During dinner, he announced a last-minute trip to Europe.
“I have to leave tomorrow morning,” he said, barely touching his food.
Daniela looked up first.
“Again?” She didn’t say it aloud, but the disappointment in her voice resonated more strongly than if she had shouted.
Martina remained silent. She simply gripped her spoon and stared at her plate.
For a moment, Emiliano felt a knot in his stomach.
Guilt, perhaps.
But he ignored it.
“Just a few days,” he said.
Patricia smiled beside him, a serene and elegant smile, and took his hand under the table like the perfect wife.
Rosa stood near the kitchen entrance, silently clearing the table, her expression unreadable.
The next morning, the driver loaded Emiliano’s suitcase into the car.
His daughters hugged him at the door.
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