The notification came exactly on time. First day of the month. Nine in the morning. I didn’t even need to look at my phone. I already knew what it said. $300 transferred successfully. Recipient: Doña Clara. My mother-in-law. Or more accurately—the mother of the woman who had once been my entire world.
It had been five years, three months, and two days since Marina died. I never liked that word. “Died.” It felt too final. Too cold. To me, she had simply… faded. Left behind an empty side of the bed. And a silence that never really went away.
She was taken in a car accident while traveling to visit her mother—a small coastal town six hours away. The report had been brief. The coffin stayed closed. The funeral… a blur. The only thing I remember clearly was her mother. Doña Clara. Fragile. Broken. Clinging to me like I was the last piece of her world still standing.
And in that moment, I made a promise. Marina had always worried about her. “She’s alone,” she used to say. “If anything ever happens to me… take care of her.” Half a joke. Half not. Standing at her grave, with fresh earth still dark and heavy, I swore I would. “I’ll take care of you,” I told Doña Clara, my voice shaking. “You won’t be alone. I’ll send you money every month. For food. For medicine. Whatever you need.” She cried. She thanked me. And I meant every word.
From that day on, every month, $300 left my account. No excuses. No delays. It wasn’t about the money. It was about Marina. It was my way of staying connected to her. Of proving—maybe to myself more than anyone—that I was still honoring what we had.
My friends didn’t understand. “Roberto, it’s been five years,” Jorge would say. “You’ve done enough. You need to move on.” But I always gave the same answer. “It’s not about her. It’s about Marina.” And that was always the end of it.
Until one ordinary Tuesday, I got a letter from the bank. There was a problem with the account. The branch in her town had closed. They needed updated information. I tried calling her. The landline was out of service. The cellphone I had bought her went straight to voicemail. Something didn’t feel right. Not panic. Not yet. Something deeper. The kind of feeling that sits in your chest and refuses to explain itself.
When was the last time we had really spoken? Not just a quick thank-you message. A real conversation. I looked at the calendar. Unused vacation days. My boss had been pushing me to take them. I looked at my keys and made a decision. “I’ll go see her,” I said out loud.
The drive was long and quiet. Too quiet. Miles passed, and my mind replayed everything. Marina’s laugh. The way she used to hum when she cooked. The warmth of her hand in mine. I cried like I always did when I was alone. Because grief doesn’t leave. It just learns how to hide.
I arrived at dusk. The town looked the same—slow, worn, beautiful in a quiet way. I drove straight to her address. 42 Las Flores Street. And then I stopped. Because something was wrong.
The house I remembered was still there—but everything about it had changed. The peeling paint was gone, replaced with bright yellow walls. The broken gate was new. The garden, once dry and forgotten, was now full of flowers. Alive. Perfect. And in the driveway sat a nearly new car.
I didn’t move. My engine was still running, but my body felt frozen. This wasn’t the house of a struggling widow. This wasn’t someone barely getting by. My chest tightened. That feeling again—stronger now. Something wasn’t right.
I stepped out of the car and walked to the door. Before I could knock, it opened.
Doña Clara stood there.
But not the woman I remembered.
She looked… healthy. Stronger. Dressed well. Not fragile. Not broken.
“Roberto?” she said, surprised—but not overwhelmed.
Not emotional.
Not the way I expected.
“I… came to see you,” I said slowly. “The bank… there was an issue…”
“Yes, yes,” she replied quickly. “Come in.”
Her voice felt different. Lighter. Almost… distracted.
I stepped inside. The house was completely renovated. New furniture. Clean walls. A large television mounted in the corner. Everything neat. Everything comfortable.
My stomach tightened.
“How have you been?” I asked.
“Fine,” she said. “Very fine.”
Too fine.
We sat down. Silence stretched between us. Something unspoken hung in the air, growing heavier by the second.
“I’ve been sending you money,” I said carefully. “Every month. For five years.”
“Yes,” she said. “You have.”
No emotion. No gratitude. Just acknowledgment.
I leaned forward slightly. “Doña Clara… what is all this?”
She hesitated. For the first time since I arrived, something shifted in her expression.
“I didn’t want to tell you,” she said quietly.
“Tell me what?”
She looked at me—really looked at me—and then said the words that shattered everything I thought I knew.
“Marina didn’t die on the way to visit me.”
My heart stopped.
“What?”
“She never made it here,” Clara continued, her voice slower now. “The accident… it happened in the city.”
I shook my head. “That’s not what I was told.”
“No,” she said. “It’s not.”
Silence fell between us, thick and suffocating.
“Then why… why did everyone say she was coming here?”
Clara’s eyes filled with something I couldn’t read. Regret. Guilt.
“Because that’s what she told you,” she whispered.
My chest tightened. “What do you mean?”
Clara swallowed hard. “Marina wasn’t coming to visit me, Roberto. She was leaving.”
The room felt like it tilted.
“Leaving?” I repeated.
“She had packed a bag,” Clara said. “She called me that morning. Told me she was going to start over. Somewhere else.”
I stood up, unable to sit anymore. “No. That’s not possible.”
“She didn’t want to hurt you,” Clara said quickly. “She didn’t know how to tell you.”
My head spun. “So she lied? And then—she died before she could even—”
Clara shook her head slowly.
“She didn’t die immediately.”
My breath caught.
