Two officers—one older, one younger—stand in your sitting room taking statements while the fan still lies tipped over like evidence of impact. Esteban remains composed. He calls the photos stupid jokes. He claims Lucía misinterpreted everything. He says he never touched her, never entered her room, never meant harm. Each sentence, on its own, might have softened someone.
But together, they don’t.
Accumulation is its own kind of proof.
Lucía tells her story quietly, her hands only shaking once when she reaches the doorknob. You describe the flashlight, the tapping, the burner phone. Tomás confirms the change in his wife—the insistence on sleeping elsewhere, the anxiety when left alone upstairs. Your mother, pale but steady, recalls comments Esteban made about Lucía that she once dismissed.
When the older officer asks for the phone, Esteban hesitates.
That hesitation matters.
Real life doesn’t unfold like television. There’s no dramatic speech, no instant resolution. The officers don’t arrest him on the spot. They take the phone. They document the hallway. They ask about locks. They gather statements. They mention possible charges depending on what’s recovered and whether more exists.
Still, when they ask Esteban to come with them for further questioning, something inside the house exhales for the first time in weeks.
He looks at you before leaving.
You had imagined anger, pleading, shame. What you get instead is a cold, confused resentment—as if the real betrayal wasn’t what he did, but that you refused to help hide it.
That look stays with you.
After the door closes, no one moves.
The house seems to listen to itself.
Your mother lowers herself into a chair, one hand pressed to her chest. Tomás kneels beside Lucía again. You remain standing, your body not yet convinced the moment has ended. Outside, a vendor calls out tamales in a bright, ordinary voice. The normalcy feels almost offensive.
Your mother begins to cry.
Not loudly—just quiet, steady tears. “What did I miss?” she whispers. “What did I miss in my own house?”
No one answers.
There is no answer large enough.
The following weeks fill with official language.
Statements. Devices. Reports. Recovery. Interviews. Protective orders.