But this time, I didn’t look down.
“I said no one treats Lucía like that again.”
They tried to brush it off. Said I was exaggerating. Said she was just washing dishes. Said that’s how things had always been.
But I didn’t back down.
“She’s eight months pregnant,” I said. “And while she’s working in the kitchen, you’re sitting here like nothing.”
They reminded me of everything they had done for me.
“I know,” I said. “But that doesn’t mean my wife has to carry everything.”
“Lucía never complained,” one of them said.
That hi:t me.
Because it was true.
She never complained.
But I finally understood something simple:
Just because someone stays silent… doesn’t mean they’re not hurting.
I looked toward the kitchen.
The light was still on.
She was listening.
“I’m not here to argue about the past,” I said. “I’m just making one thing clear.”
I stepped closer.
“My wife is pregnant. And I will not allow this to continue.”
They asked if they were no longer welcome.
“No,” I said. “You’re welcome. But if you come… you help.”
Then Isabel said it, cold and sharp:
“All this… for a woman?”