For three years of marriage, I have learned to live with unanswered questions. Adrián never touched me like a husband. Never reached for me at night with hunger or even with shy uncertainty. He was kind, attentive, responsible, and endlessly careful with my feelings, but physically he moved around me as if intimacy were a border he could not cross. At first I called it nerves. Then trauma. Then stress. Then something I stopped naming because every label made me feel more foolish.

But this, a strange voice inside my mother-in-law’s bedroom at two in the morning, slices through all my practiced patience.

I slide out of bed and step into the dark hallway.

The house is large enough that sound travels oddly. The corridors amplify whispers and swallow footsteps. Lightning flashes through the tall front windows, painting the floor in pale silver for an instant, then plunging everything back into shadow. Teresa’s room is at the far end, always shut, always smelling faintly of lavender and medicine when she opens it. Tonight the door is not fully closed. A line of warm yellow light spills across the hall.

My heart is beating much too hard.