Once, as we were leaving the hospital, she took my hand and said to me in a soft voice:

Once, as we were leaving the hospital, she took my hand and said to me in a soft voice:

“Son… I don’t know why God put you in my path,” she said in such a weak voice that I had to lean closer to hear her better, “but when I can no longer pay you… please don’t stop visiting me yet.”

That sentence stayed with me.

I smiled, trying to lighten its weight.

“Don’t worry, Doña Carmen. Just focus on getting better first.”

She squeezed my hand with her cold, bony fingers.

“Promise me.”

I don’t know why, but I promised.

From then on, I kept going to her house every week, sometimes twice, even though she never gave me the 200 pesos she had promised.

At first, I thought she simply forgot.

Later, I imagined she might be waiting to gather several weeks together to pay me all at once.

Eventually, I understood the truth: she simply had nothing to pay me with.

One afternoon, while I was making her some chicken broth, I gathered the courage and said,

“Doña Carmen, don’t worry about the money. You can pay me whenever you can.”

She set the spoon down on the plate and looked at me with a strange sadness.

“You always talk as if there will still be a ‘later.’”

I didn’t know how to respond.

Over the months, my routine became part of her life, and she slowly became part of mine.

I would bring her fruit when I had a little extra money.

I bought her medicine if I noticed she couldn’t afford it.

Sometimes, after finishing the cleaning, I would sit with her for a while and listen to stories about her youth, about a husband who had already passed away, and about some children who, according to her, “had their own lives.”

She never spoke badly of them.

That impressed me.

She would only say,

“A mother never stops being a mother, even when her children forget how to be children.”

One day I found, in a half-closed drawer, several old letters returned by the mail.

All addressed to the same place in Monterrey.

All with the same last name.

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