AT TEN O’CLOCK AT NIGHT I FOUND MY WIFE, EIGHT MONTHS PREGNANT, WASHING THE DISHES FOR MY ENTIRE FAMILY… AND AT THAT MOMENT I UNDERSTOOD THAT THE WORST MAN IN THAT HOUSE WASN’T MY BROTHER-IN-LAW, NOR MY SISTERS, NOR EVEN MY MOTHER. IT WAS ME. I’m thirty-four years old, and for a long time I lied to myself, saying that peace reigned in my house. There were no shouts. No blows. No scandals. But there was something worse. There was a woman swallowing her exhaustion, her humiliation, and her pain… while I looked the other way. My father died when I was a teenager, and since then my mother, Rosa Ramírez, has turned the house into her kingdom. My three sisters helped her build it all. I grew up there, obeying. I was used to them commenting on my work, my money, my schedule… and later, on my marriage too. When I married Lucía, I thought love was enough to protect her. What an idiot I was. Lucía was good. Too good. One of those women who smile so as not to make anyone uncomfortable. One of those who are grateful even when they’re burdened with what no one else wants to do. At first, my family welcomed her with hugs, food, and blessings. But very soon, the comments started, seemingly small… but they weren’t. “She’s not very good at cooking.” “She’s very delicate.” “Let’s see if she can handle a real house.” I listened to them. They bothered me. But I never said a word. I always found an excuse. “They don’t mean any harm.” “That’s just how they are.” “It’s not worth arguing.” Every time I thought that, Lucía paid the price. Eight months ago, we found out we were going to be parents. I cried tears of joy. My mother did too. My sisters beamed. But after the news, Lucía started working more, not less. If we had visitors, she cooked. If there were dishes, she washed them. If anything was missing, she got up. And when I asked her to rest, she would answer in that soft voice that now haunts me even in my dreams: “Don’t worry, Diego. I can do it.” But I couldn’t. It’s just that no one wanted to see him. Or worse. They did see him… and it suited them. The night that opened my eyes was a Saturday. My sisters had come to have dinner with my mother. They ate, laughed, made a mess of half the kitchen, and then went to the living room to watch TV, as if the house ran itself. I went out to the patio for a moment. When I came back, I saw her. Lucía was standing in front of the sink. Alone. Her dress clung to her back with sweat. Her enormous belly brushed against the edge of the counter. One hand on her hip and the other trying to hold a plate while she took deep breaths, as if even that was a struggle. The clock struck ten. The kitchen smelled of grease, soap, and exhaustion. Then a cup slipped from her fingers. It didn’t fall to the floor. But the impact against the sink made her close her eyes and press her lips together, as if she were fighting to keep from breaking right there. And I… I froze. Because I understood, in a second, everything I’d been denying myself for months. My wife wasn’t helping. My wife was being used. Right in front of me. Inside my own house. With my silence as permission. I felt such immense shame that my face burned. I took out my phone. I called Isabel. Then Patricia. Then Carmen. I told them to come into the living room. My mother was already sitting there when I walked in. The four of them looked at me, puzzled. I remained standing. From the kitchen, I could still hear the water running. That sound pierced me like a knife. I looked at them one by one. And for the first time in my life, I didn’t speak as a son. I spoke as a husband. “From this moment on, Lucía will not lift a single plate for any of you. It’s over.” And if that bothers them, then I’m the one who’s going to be uncomfortable… because today you’re going to hear everything I’ve kept quiet about for years. No one said anything. Not my sisters. Not my mother. But then she stood up very slowly, met my gaze… and opened her mouth. Why did my mother smile just before ARTICLES GP Photo answering me? What had Lucía been silently hiding from me for months? And why did a sudden, sharp bang from the kitchen suddenly startle us all? What happened next…? I’ll leave the continuation in the first pinned comment.

And when I started the engine, I heard Isabel say my name.

I didn’t let her finish.

—If anything happens to my wife or my son, I will never speak to them again in my life.

I started before I heard the answer.

The journey to the hospital was a nightmare.

Lucia clenched her teeth.

Sometimes he would close his eyes.

Sometimes he would look at me as if he wanted to tell me something important but couldn’t find the strength.

I was driving while trembling.

I was talking to him all the time.

I kept telling him that we were almost there.

That it would hold up.

That he wouldn’t leave me alone in that.

She was just breathing.

Again and again.

As if every breath were a battle.

She was taken to the emergency room immediately.

A nurse asked me questions that I could barely answer.

Weeks of pregnancy.

If you had experienced bleeding before.

If there was pain.

If there was a fall.

And then I was speechless.

Because I didn’t know.

I, her husband, didn’t know.

I didn’t know if he had been feeling unwell for days.

I didn’t know if I had been dizzy.

I didn’t know if he’d been pretending to be okay for weeks.

I didn’t know anything.

Because he had been in the same house… but far away from her.

My mother arrived fifteen minutes later.

She came alone.

That surprised me.

I thought she would come escorted by my sisters, with explanations, with pride, with anger.

But not.

He sat next to me in the waiting room.

And for the first time in many years I saw her old.

Not authoritarian.

Not imposing.

Old.

Tired.

Scared.

“Where are they?” I asked without looking at her.

“I didn’t let them come,” he replied.

I turned my head.

—And now it turns out you care?

My mother swallowed hard.

He took a while to reply.

—It matters to me more than you think.

I wanted to give him a harsh answer.

Something that would hurt him.

But at that moment the doctor came out.

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