She did anyway, because teachers are trained to respond to emergencies, and somewhere in her bones she still believed ignoring a call could be a regret.
“Mrs. Mendoza?” the voice asked—deep, calm, unmistakably confident.
“Yes,” Sofía replied, cautious.
“This is Alejandro Riveros.”
Sofía stood very still, as if movement might break reality.
“The CEO?” she asked before she could stop herself.
He chuckled gently.
“The same. I hope I’m not catching you at a bad time.”
Sofía’s mind raced to the gala. To the invitation sitting on the kitchen counter. To Javier’s smooth smile. To his “you’ll hate it.”
“No,” she said slowly. “Not a bad time.”
“I’m glad,” Riveros replied. “I’ve been trying to meet you for months.”
Sofía frowned. “Me?”
“Yes,” he said, and his tone shifted slightly—less corporate, more sincere. “I read your proposal. I read the reports. I read the letters from your students and the community partners. And I saw the award.”
Sofía’s grip on the phone tightened.
“Which award?” she asked quietly.
“The National Educator of the Year,” Riveros said. “It’s not a small honor, Mrs. Mendoza. It’s… rare.”
Sofía’s throat tightened.
She hadn’t told Javier much about that.
Not because she was hiding it.
Because every time she started to talk about her work, Javier’s eyes drifted. His phone buzzed. His mind left the room.
After a while, you learn what topics make you lonely.
Riveros continued, warm and steady.
“I’m hosting the gala tonight,” he said. “And I’d like you to attend. Personally.”
Sofía’s heart hammered.
“I—my husband said—” she began.
Riveros paused, as if choosing his words carefully.
“Your husband RSVP’d,” he said. “But he didn’t mention whether you would be present. I assumed you would be.”
There it was.
The quiet gap.
The empty space where Sofía was supposed to stand.
In that silence, the puzzle pieces Sofía had tried not to see slid into place.
The “work dinners.”
The “last-minute meetings.”
The way Javier started dressing differently—sharper, younger.