05/06/2026
My father spotted me struggling down the street, my baby balanced on one hip and grocery bags hanging from my other arm.
“Where’s your car?” he asked.
When I quietly replied, “His mother took it… she said I should feel grateful they’re letting us stay there,” Dad didn’t argue. He simply opened the passenger door.
“Get in,” he said calmly. “We’re going to handle this tonight.”
They had no idea who my father really was… until he showed up at their door and the color drained from their faces.
My left ankle was swollen so badly my sneaker barely fit anymore. Every step sent a sharp wave of pain up my leg, but I kept moving. Stopping meant thinking, and thinking meant breaking down.
Mateo was eleven months old and heavy on my hip. His damp curls brushed against my cheek while he tapped my collarbone with sticky fingers, humming softly as if nothing around us was falling apart.
The grocery bag dug painfully into my palm. The jug of milk knocked against my knee with every uneven step. I was still half a mile from the apartment, and the Monterrey afternoon heat pressed down like a weight.
All I wanted was to reach home before Mateo started crying.
A car slowed beside me. I flinched instinctively.
Then I heard my name.
“Camila?”
I turned and saw my father behind the windshield, his eyes wide with disbelief.
“Dad,” I said, my voice smaller than I meant it to be.
He pulled over immediately, switched on the hazard lights, and stepped out before the engine had even fully stopped. He was still wearing his work shirt with the CFE logo across the chest, his forearms darkened by the sun. He always looked like a man in the middle of fixing something.
His gaze dropped straight to my ankle, then to Mateo, then to the groceries in my hand—like he was gathering evidence.
“Why are you walking?” he asked. “Where’s your car?”
My stomach tightened. I had practiced explanations for coworkers and acquaintances, but not for my father.
I tried to shrug like it didn’t matter.
But it did.
Everything did.
I swallowed.
“Luis’s mom took it,” I said quietly, adjusting Mateo on my hip. “She said I should be grateful they’re letting us stay there.”
For a moment, Dad didn’t react. He just stared at me like he’d heard something he refused to accept.
Then his jaw tightened.
“Who,” he asked slowly, “is ‘his mom’?”
“Luis’s mother,” I replied. “Rosa.”
The name hung heavily in the air. Dad’s nostrils flared as he glanced toward the apartment buildings down the street, as if he could see straight through the walls.
“You mean the car you’re paying for?” he asked in a dangerously calm tone.
I looked down, tightening my grip on the plastic bag handles.
“It’s registered in Luis’s name,” I admitted. “She says since I’m living under her roof, she decides who uses it.”
Dad blinked once.
“You’re living under her roof?”
A chill crept down my spine.
“After Luis lost his job, we couldn’t afford our apartment,” I explained. “His parents offered to let us stay until we got back on our feet.”
“And in return,” Dad said flatly, “they take away your transportation.”
I didn’t answer. Mateo shifted sleepily against me while my ankle throbbed harder with every second.
Dad gently took the grocery bag from my hand as if it weighed nothing and opened the car door.
“Get in.”
“Dad…” I started, panic rising in my chest. Panic about what Luis would say, about what Rosa would say, about the way they always made me feel like needing help was somehow my fault.
Dad cut me off without raising his voice.
“Camila. Get in the car. We’re fixing this tonight.”
Something in his tone—steady and certain—tightened my throat. Still, I hesitated. Fear had become a habit.
He stepped closer and lowered his voice so only I could hear.
“Sweetheart, you’re limping down the street with my grandson in your arms because someone wants you to feel trapped.”
My eyes burned.
“I don’t want a fight.”
His expression stayed firm, but his voice softened slightly.
“Then they shouldn’t have started one.”
He gently held Mateo while I climbed into the car without twisting my ankle further. Mateo looked at him—and smiled.
Dad strapped him into the back seat with the focus of someone who had already decided the next hour mattered more than anyone’s comfort.
Then he got behind the wheel, gripping it firmly like a man preparing to drive straight into a storm.
I stared at the road ahead, my heart pounding.
Because I knew exactly where we were going.
And I knew Rosa would call me ungrateful.
But for the first time in a long while…
I didn’t feel alone. Read more in Comment or Most relevant -> All comments 👇