My blood boiled, but before I could respond, the neighbor across the street spoke from the doorway with a firm voice:
“The only thing that young man did was take care of her when none of you bothered to come see her.”
A heavy silence filled the room.
Doña Carmen’s children understood they had little to do there.
They left with the same hurry they had arrived with.
They didn’t even ask how her final days had been.
After the funeral, I returned to the house alone.
I sat at the table where I had served Doña Carmen so many meals.
I opened the letter again.
And I cried until my head hurt.
With that money I paid my university debts.
I fixed the roof of the house.
Painted the walls.
Replaced the gas installation that had been dangerous.
I kept the old radio, the faded photographs, and the wooden bed, because throwing them away felt like erasing something sacred.
I continued studying.
More peacefully.
With less hunger.
With less fear.
Two years later, I graduated.
The day I received my diploma, the first thing I did was return to the alley with a bag full of ingredients.
I made chicken broth in Doña Carmen’s kitchen.
Just as she had asked.
When the steam filled the house, I felt an absence as large as a presence.
By habit, I served two bowls.
One for me.
Another in front of the empty chair.
“I finished, Doña Carmen,” I said quietly, my throat tight. “I made it.”
Outside, evening was falling over Guadalajara, and the alley was just as small, just as silent.
But I was no longer the same young man who had come for 200 pesos.
Because sometimes you accept a job to earn money…
and end up discovering, without realizing it, the final act of love and repentance of someone who was leaving this world.