Alejandro hesitates.
“Before the accident, my father planned to make me CEO after I finished college. Damian hated it.”
You think of Damian’s smile near the wine room.
Your stomach turns.
“Do you think he caused the crash?”
Alejandro lets out a bitter laugh.
“What I think doesn’t matter. I was on pain medication. Damian told everyone I was confused. My father said I needed peace. My mother said talking about it would damage the family.”
“And after that?”
“After that, I became the thing they hid upstairs.”
You stare at the polished floor.
Suddenly the mansion feels different.
Not just cold.
Dangerous.
The next weeks become a pattern.
By day, you scrub marble floors, polish silver, fold sheets, and disappear whenever guests arrive. By night, you enter Alejandro’s room with towels wrapped around the braces so they do not clink against the furniture.
You help him stretch.
You help him stand.
You massage his legs when cramps make him bite down on a towel to keep from crying out.
You read physical therapy exercises from old medical books he kept hidden behind novels.
Sometimes he curses you.
Sometimes he curses himself.
Sometimes he says he cannot do it, and you say, “Then we stop for tonight, not forever.”
Slowly, something impossible begins to happen.
His legs respond.
Not fully.
Not easily.
But enough.
The first time he takes one step between the wheelchair and the bed, he nearly falls. You catch him, both of you crashing against the mattress, breathless and shocked.
Then he starts laughing.
Not politely.
Not bitterly.
Laughing like the sound has been trapped inside him for three years and finally found a window.
You laugh too, covering your mouth so nobody hears.
He looks at you, still smiling.
“María,” he whispers.
You blink.