When he went to the bedroom, I stayed in the kitchen, staring at the necklace like it was alive.
Then I remembered the old woman.
Feeling foolish, I filled a glass with water and dropped the necklace inside.
That night, I couldn’t sleep.
At six in the morning, a strange smell woke me—metallic, sour, like wet coins.
I walked barefoot into the kitchen… and froze.
The water was no longer clear.
It had turned thick and greenish.
The pendant had split open.
At the bottom of the glass was a gray powder… and a folded strip of metal.
My hands shook as I opened it.
It was a miniature copy of my life insurance policy.
My name.
My signature.
The payout amount.
And in Mauricio’s handwriting, four words that drained the air from my lungs:
“Tomorrow night.”