My daughter Ana is 11 years old and yesterday she spent five hours outside the house in the downpour because her key no longer fit in the lock

My daughter Ana is 11 years old and yesterday she spent five hours outside the house in the downpour because her key no longer fit in the lock đŸ˜±đŸ˜źâš . The one who ordered that lock to be changed was my mother. My own mom. He had been living with us for 22 days since we buried my dad.

I am a nurse on the afternoon shift, IMSS, there in CoyoacĂĄn. I saw six missed calls from Ana at the control. I went into the medicine room to mark him.

“Mommy, my key won’t open.

“What do you mean it doesn’t open, my life?”

“It’s not the same key, Mommy. I’m cold.

I told him to ring the bell loudly. That marked grandma. To insist. I told him that in an hour I would be out.

Two hours later I received a WhatsApp:

“Mommy, grandma saw me through the window. He doesn’t open me. Come.”

I didn’t tell anyone. I grabbed the bag. I told the supervisor I had an emergency and went outside. I don’t remember how I got to the parking lot.

I drove in the downpour. He was pressing the steering wheel. I was thinking about my father buried three weeks ago. In Ana’s jacket that had been left on the back of the chair in the morning. That same morning my mother had told me, “Have a nice day, daughter.”

When I arrived at the house in Coyoacán—that big house with bougainvilleas that my dad bought before he got married—Ana was sitting on the porch step. Soaked. The braids undone. The backpack dripping in a puddle.

I got off without an umbrella. I hugged her. It was freezing. Purple lips.

“Excuse me, Mommy,” he said. As if she had done something.

I knocked on the door.

My mom opened it. He was wearing a silk robe and a glass of wine in his hand. Without letting go of the glass.

“Daughter, don’t make a drama. I’ve already spoken with your sister Mariela. We decided that you and the escuincla are not going to live here anymore.

Behind her, on the couch where my father read, Mariela’s children watched cartoons. Under the older one’s foot was the little hook blanket that Ana knitted with my dad last winter. Footstep.

“Did you change the lock?”

“We needed privacy. Your sister is going to come on the weekends. Find yourself a depa, mija. You work.

I didn’t scream. I didn’t cry. I held his gaze.

“Understood.

I grabbed Ana’s hand. I put her in the car. I turned on the heat.

I didn’t start later. I stayed at the wheel. My hands were cold and I hadn’t noticed.

“Mommy,” Ana spoke softly from the co-pilot. Does Granny not love me anymore?

I tucked her wet hair behind her ear.

“Granny doesn’t know how to love anyone, my life.

I drove to my friend Lupita’s apartment. He lent us the sofa bed, towels, hot milk. Ana fell asleep clinging to my arm as she did when she was three years old. I didn’t sleep.

I stayed in the kitchen watching the sunrise. Going over my mother’s words one by one.

My mom had been showing me exactly who she was for 32 years.

He scolded me if I threw a glass. Mariela was celebrated if she burned down the kitchen. He called me “dramatic”. She called Mariela “creative”. When my dad got sick a year ago, my mom called me crying. “Daughter, come, I can’t.”

I left my apartment. I packed Ana. I rented a room on the internet to store my things. I moved to take care of it.

I took care of him. I gave him his medicines. I changed his diapers. I shook his hand when he died, at four in the morning, me.

My mom that day was in the room drinking coffee with her friends from the club.

Three days after the burial, my mom was already moving furniture. He painted my dad’s room yellow. He threw his medical books into the yard. He bought bunk beds for Mariela’s children. He sent Ana and me to the little room next to the service yard.

“It’s like a little nest, mija,” he told me.

I didn’t say anything. I endured. I thought it was the duel. I thought it was going to go away.

One night I went down for water. My mom was in the kitchen talking to Mariela on the phone. Short. I heard her say:

“Don’t worry about space, daughter. Elena is not going to stay long. I only held on here for your dad.

Not three weeks had passed since the burial.

I went back to the room. I didn’t say anything to Ana. But the next day, after the shift, I drove to the notary’s office of Mr. Javier Torres. My father’s notary all his life.

What Don Javier told me that afternoon I didn’t tell anyone. Not even Ana. Not even Lupita. Not even my mother.

My dad had put the house in my name. To my name and Ana’s. Before he died. An armored trust.

My mom didn’t own anything.

I left the notary’s office with the yellow envelope. I put it in the glove compartment of the car. I didn’t open it. I was going to give my mom time. I was going to wait for the moment. I was going to explain calmly.

That was five days ago.

Yesterday, while Ana was crying on the porch in the rain, that envelope was still closed in my glove compartment. 40 meters from the door that would not open.

That morning, in Lupita’s kitchen, I grabbed my cell phone and dialed Don Javier at seven o’clock. I told him everything. The lock. The five hours. The thing about the little blanket.

Don Javier did not speak for twenty seconds.

Then he said to me, in a voice that was not that of the kind gentleman of the notary’s office:

“Daughter, come. Bring the envelope. And bring Ana too. I need a forensic doctor to check her before ten in the morning.

“Why a lawyer, licentiate?”

Don Javier took a deep breath on the other side. And he answered:

Part 2.

“I need a legal examiner to examine Ana today, daughter. Because what your mom did yesterday is not a family fight. It is abandonment of a minor. And I need the doctor’s paper before ten, because at eleven I enter the Public Registry with something else.

I was left with my cell phone stuck to my ear without answering. Lupita was pouring coffee into a cup. The coffee pot whistled. I saw the coffee maker but I couldn’t hear it.

“Something else, licentiate?”

Don Javier did not answer afterwards.

“Daughter, your mother didn’t just change the lock. Three days ago he submitted a paper to the Public Registry. A piece of paper where it says that you gave her the right to live in the house. And to sell it. It has your signature.

I never signed anything.

I told him that. Three times. “I never signed anything, Licenciado. I never signed anything. I never signed.”

Don Javier told me to calm down. That he would see me with him in an hour. To bring Ana. That he brought the yellow envelope.

I hung up.

I stayed in Lupita’s kitchen chair. He had the cup of coffee in front of him. He hadn’t touched her.

I thought of my sister Mariela. I thought Mariela had signed with my mother. I thought Mariela knew. That the two had put it together since the funeral.

Mariela is 37 years old. When I was seven, she taught me how to ride a bike. He gave me his old sweaters when I didn’t have any. Once, when my mom punished me for two days without going out for throwing a glass of milk, Mariela sneaked sweet bread under the door for me.

That was 25 years ago.

Yesterday Mariela was in my living room watching her children step on Ana’s blanket. Without saying anything.

I preferred Mariela to be dead than to have sold me.

That’s what I thought. And then I was ashamed to have thought about it.

Ana woke up. She came to the kitchen barefoot, with her hair in a nest.

“Mommy, is there a school today?”

I told him no. That today we were going with a doctor friend and then with a graduate. I told him to put on the pink sweatshirt.

I didn’t tell him why.

At the notary’s office, Don Javier was waiting for us with a man in a dressing gown. The doctor checked Ana. He took pictures of her hands—her nails were still purple. He asked her how long she had been away. He asked her what she had eaten the day before. He played a role. He sealed it.

When Ana went to the waiting room with a palette, Don Javier put three sheets on the table.

“Daughter. This is the signature that is on the paper of the Public Registry.

I saw her.

It was my signature.

It was exactly my signature.

I never signed anything.

“Licenciado,” my voice stuck, “that’s my handwriting.” But I never


Don Javier put another sheet of paper on top.

“This is the signature you left me five days ago, when you came for the trust envelope. Compare them.

The two signatures were identical. They were the same. Copied.

“How?” I said. I heard myself from afar. How, graduate?

Don Javier adjusted his glasses. He spoke slowly, like when you explain something to someone you don’t understand well.

“Do you remember, daughter, that when your father was sick, they asked you to sign many hospital papers?” Transfer of treatment, authorization for transfusions, voluntary discharge.

I remembered. There were about twenty sheets. He signed them in the waiting room while Ana ate cookies.

“Your mother kept one of those sheets. One that you signed in blank, below, because the nurse told you that it was for Monday’s discharge. But it was not for discharge. That sheet was blank at the top. His mother sent him to write an assignment in his name above. Dated three weeks ago.

I covered my mouth.

“Your signature is real,” said Don Javier. Paper is fraud.

“And
” and Mariela?

Don Javier shook his head.

“Mariela is also deceived, daughter. Your mother showed Mariela that same sheet and told her that you had already decided to leave, that you had already signed on your own, that you were “in agreement to look for an apartment.” That is why Mariela arrived on Saturday with her children so calm. Mariela thinks you accepted.

My sister didn’t sell me.

I felt weird. As if they had taken something heavy from my chest and at the same time they had put something uglier in me.

“Mariela doesn’t know?” I asked him.

“Mariela doesn’t know anything about the trust. Nor does he know that this signature is cheating. Mariela believes that her mother owns the house.

Don Javier grabbed my hands.

“Daughter, do you mark Mariela on Sundays?” Or does she mark you?

I kept thinking.

Three years. Three years that we didn’t speak directly. My mom was always the one who ran errands. “Mariela says be fine.” “Mariela says that children send you greetings.” “Mariela is busy today, better talk to her later.”

It was never later.

I left the notary’s office with Ana by the hand. I called Mariela from the car, in the parking lot. Without thinking about it any more.

It rang four times.

“Well?” he answered. His voice sounded tired. More tired than I remembered.

“Mariela, it’s me. Elena.

There was silence.

“Elena?” You? Why are you marking me? Mom told me you didn’t want to talk to me.

I didn’t know what to say first. I told him, without order:

“Mariela, I never signed that assignment. I never agreed to leave. Ana spent five hours on the porch yesterday. My mom didn’t open the door.

On the other side there was a strange noise. As if Mariela had dropped something.

“Elena, wait for me,” he said. His voice broke. Mom told me
 Mom told me that you had been saying for a month that you wanted the apartment back. That you had signed last Friday at the notary’s office that yes


“I didn’t sign anything last Friday.

“But
 Elena


Mariela remained silent.

“Was Ana on the porch?”

“Five hours.” Under the downpour.

Mariela cried.

He cried ugly. Of those breathless cries. I hadn’t heard my sister cry like that since my dad died.

“I
 I arrived on Saturday thinking that you had already left on Friday,” he said between hiccups. Mom showed me papers. I believed him. I stepped on
 Mateo stepped on the blanket and I didn’t say anything to him because I thought it was nobody’s anymore, Elena, forgive me


I couldn’t answer him. I cried too.

Lupita had put a blanket over the youngest son —Ana— over me. I saw it in the rearview mirror. Asleep.

“Mariela,” I said, grabbing the steering wheel with one hand. Who shows you mom’s papers?

Mariela answered slowly:

“Well, Mom. Who else?

“And your husband, Mariela. Has Ricardo seen a role?

“Ricardo doesn’t get involved in my mom’s stuff, Elena. You know it.

“Mariela.” Did you sign anything?

Mariela was slow to answer.

“I signed a sheet of paper last month. My mom told me it was for the property tax. I didn’t have my glasses. I signed where he put his finger.

I was left with my cell phone stuck to my ear.

My mom hadn’t just forged my signature.

He had also used Mariela’s:

Part 3.

Don Javier confirmed it to me that same afternoon. The sheet that Mariela signed “for the property tax” was a cession. A transfer where Mariela appeared to cede her hereditary rights over the house in favor of my mother. Mariela didn’t own anything either. Mariela had signed her own exit without knowing it.

My mom didn’t want the house to live in.

My mom wanted her alone for herself.

And to get it, she had been willing to leave the two daughters outside. Mine under the downpour. Mariela deceived with a piece of paper from the property tax.

Don Javier filed a complaint that same Monday.

My mom was summoned on Wednesday.

I was sitting on a plastic bench in the corridor of the Public Prosecutor’s Office when she arrived. Dark glasses. Branded bag. Painted as if for mass.

He saw me.

He saw Mariela on the other side.

He saw that we were together.

“Mariela,” my mother said. He walked toward her without seeing me. Mariela, daughter, this crazy woman is manipulating you. Let’s go.

Mariela did not get up.

“Mom, did you ask a lawyer to forge my sister’s signature?”

My mom squeezed the bag.

“I did it for the family, Mariela. You don’t understand how these things are handled.

“For the family?” You left Ana in the downpour for five hours, Mom.

My mom turned to look at me. For the first time in four days he looked me in the eye.

“That little girl should never have been born. And you know it, Elena.

There it was.

What I had waited to hear 32 years.

It didn’t hurt like I thought. He gave me something else. Like when you finally take out a piece of glass that you had buried in your foot since you were a child.

For my mother, I was never a daughter. I was a miscalculation that didn’t have the decency to die in time.

Mariela stood between her and me.

“Mom.” You are going to answer what the Public Prosecutor’s Office asks you. And then you don’t look for me again.

My mom sat down.

Months passed.

Ana and I slept for months in Lupita’s living room. Months of summonses, confrontations, expert reports. One night, in Lupita’s kitchen, I said to Mariela:

“Leave her.” Let him keep the house. Ana and I are going to QuerĂ©taro.

Mariela grabbed my face with both hands.

“If you give up, Elena, the next old lady who wants to steal her house will think it’s normal to put up with it.” You don’t give up for yourself. You give up for the ones that come.

That night I didn’t sleep.

The next day I signed the ratification.

The judge ruled in our favor. Don Javier translated it for me in the hallway, in a low voice, as when one explains something to someone who no longer understands well:

“They deceived you, daughter. The law does see it. The house never ceased to be hers and Ana’s.

My mom didn’t go to jail. The judge suspended his sentence due to age. But the precedent remained. And he was forbidden to approach Ana until Ana turns 18. That was written by the judge with his hand. And I read it to him, aloud, in the hallway, with my glasses on.

My mom didn’t look at me.

He continued talking to Mariela.

That hurt me for a second. Not anymore.

Mariela and I returned to the house in Coyoacán. We clean. We threw away the glass of wine that my mom had left on the counter the night of the downpour. We folded Ana’s little hook blanket and put it on my dad’s couch, where it is his turn.

Mariela sleeps here on weekends now. Her children return to the bunk bed that my mother had bought to cum me. This time they are welcome. This time the bed is really borrowed, not stolen.

Six more months passed.

My mom lives alone. I rented him a room in a boarding house in Tlalpan. Once a month I send him groceries with a delivery man. I don’t see it. I don’t mark him.

The last time I sent the groceries, the delivery man returned to me with a message.

“The lady says to tell her that she is her mother. And that this is going to weigh on him.

Until the last day he wanted the pain to be mine.

I did not receive it.

Today is Saturday.

Ana is in the yard watering the bougainvillea. She planted them. He has just turned 12 years old. I made chocolate cake for her. Mariela came with her children. There were twelve candles and no one asked him to go to the small room at the back.

Before people arrived, I gave Ana a new key.

The one that does open.

“Is it mine, Mommy?”

“It’s yours, my life.

“And no one is going to change it for me?”

I bent down. I tucked her hair behind her ear. I didn’t say no.

The Challenged:

“If someone changes it, you mark me.” And I’m coming. Even if it is on duty. Even if it’s raining. I’m coming.

Ana nodded slowly. Like when he understands something big.

She put the key in her dress pocket.

Sometimes, in the evenings, I still look out on the porch before locking it. It’s empty. It has been empty for a year. But I peek out.

One continues to look, even though there is nothing to see anymore.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *