The wife, 29 years old, silk dress, her hair styled like someone who just stepped out of a magazine. He looked Doña Rosa up and down without saying hello even once. How to look at a piece of furniture that doesn’t match the decor. “Is this it?” Alexander asked without looking at the old woman. Yes love.
Doña Rosa comes with good references. Valeria turned on her heels and went up the stairs without saying a single word. Alejandro smiled at Doña Rosa with an discomfort he tried to hide. Don’t take it seriously. She’s like that at first. If Doña Rosa nodded silently, but while Alejandro showed her the house, she walked looking at every picture, every corner, every framed photo on the walls.
And when he found the first photograph, a child of about 3 years old with light eyes, sitting in a garden, he stopped. She stood still in front of that photo for longer than usual. Alejandro, who was already in front, turned around . Is everything alright, Mrs. Rosa? She blinked and swallowed.
Yes, he said, everything’s fine. But her eyes said something completely different. On the first morning, Alejandro had a quick breakfast and left before 8 with his briefcase and the phone glued to his ear. He told Doña Rosa that she should ask Valeria for anything she needed, as she knew how the house worked. The gate closed, and the silence that remained was not a peaceful silence.
And Valeria came downstairs 20 minutes later wearing a short robe and sunglasses , even though they were inside. He poured himself a coffee without offering anything and sat on the kitchen stool looking at his phone. “Em for the first floor,” he said without looking up. Floors, bathrooms, windows, and when he finishes he goes up to the second floor. “Yes, ma’am.
What time do you usually have lunch so I can have it ready?” Valeria looked up from her phone for barely a second. You don’t cook here, that’s Lucia’s job, you clean. Understood. “And another thing,” Valeria said, placing the cup on the counter with more force than necessary. There are rules in this house.
He does not enter the rooms on the second floor without my permission. He doesn’t touch any of my things. She does n’t tell my husband what happens here when he’s not around. Is that clear? Doña Rosa looked her in the eyes. Clear. Okay, ma’am. Valeria held her gaze for a moment, searching for something. She didn’t find what she was looking for, perhaps out of fear, and went back to the phone.
Doña Rosa took the mop and began to work. As he walked down the corridor of the main hall. He stopped again in front of the photographs on the wall. There were several. The light-eyed boy growing up, first walking, then riding a bicycle, then in a school uniform. Photos of an adoptive family that was no longer there, and in all of them, those same eyes gripped the mop with both hands.
She continued cleaning. At noon, Lucia, a robust and quiet woman of about 50, served lunch at the dining room table. One plate for Valeria, nothing more. Doña Rosa finished cleaning the first-floor bathroom and discreetly peeked into the kitchen. Tell me where I can get something to eat, Miss Lucia.
And Lucia opened her mouth to answer, but Valeria was already in the doorway of the kitchen. Who told him he could eat at this hour? Doña Rosa turned towards her. I’ve been working since 8, ma’am. We only eat here when I say so. Valeria pointed at the plate that Lucia had just served her. Do you see that? That’s for me. You eat what’s left over.
If there’s any left over. Lucia looked down at the counter. He said nothing. Valeria took her plate, went to the dining room and sat down. From there, without raising her voice, she added, “And eat in the kitchen, not at the table.” Doña Rosa waited. When Valeria finished, she left the plate with half-eaten food on the counter and went upstairs without clearing it away.
Lucía silently brought the plate to Doña Rosa with a look that wordlessly apologized. “You don’t have to do that,” said Doña Rosa gently. “Eat,” Lucia said softly, before she changed her mind. Doña Rosa sat on the kitchen stool and ate the cold leftovers with a calmness that was not resignation, it was something else.
It was the calm of someone who has a purpose that goes far beyond hunger or humiliation. When he finished, he washed the plate, dried it, and put it back in its place. Then he went back to work. Alejandro arrived at 7 pm with a bag of flowers and the face of a man who wants to erase his tiredness with a good dinner.
She entered the dining room and found the table spotless, the food ready, and Valeria wearing a dress she doesn’t usually wear when staying home. “What a lovely surprise,” he said, giving her a kiss. “I wanted your first day with the new housekeeper to go well,” Valeria said with a smile that reached her eyes. Doña Rosa entered the dining room with the water pitcher.
She poured it for both of them quietly. “How did it go, Doña Rosa?” Alejandro asked, turning to her casually. ” Fine, sir, the house is in order. Are you settled in? Do you have everything you need?” Before Doña Rosa could answer, Valeria chimed in with the same perfect smile. “I’ve already shown you everything, love.
You’re settled in wonderfully, aren’t you , Rosa?” A brief pause. “Yes, ma’am.” Alejandro nodded contentedly and sat down to eat. Dinner unfolded with almost perfect normalcy. He talked about a project. She laughed at just the right moments, her wine glass always full. A couple who, from the outside, looked like they’d stepped out of a magazine.
Doña Rosa cleared the dishes, cleaned the kitchen, and retired to the basement room Valeria had assigned her that morning. A room that was technically a storage room with a mattress Without saying a word, but before going downstairs, she paused for a second in the hallway. She heard Alejandro’s laughter from the dining room.
She closed her eyes for a moment and went downstairs. Before continuing with our story, I’d like to send a very special greeting to our followers in the United States, Mexico, Colombia, Peru, Spain, Italy , Venezuela, Uruguay, Paraguay, the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, El Salvador, Ecuador, Bolivia, Chile, Argentina, Costa Rica, Cuba, Canada, France, Panama, Australia, Guatemala, Nicaragua, and Honduras.
Where in the world are you listening from? Comment so I can say hello. Blessings to all. Continuing with the story. The following days were all the same on the surface. Alejandro left early. Valeria came down late. Doña Rosa worked from dawn until she was allowed to stop. But there was something Doña Rosa did that Lucía didn’t notice from the third day onward.
Every time she passed by the hallway with the photos, she stopped. Not for long, just a few seconds, but always. One Tuesday morning, while Lucía was preparing breakfast, she saw Doña Rosa Standing in front of the largest photograph in the living room. It was a picture of Alejandro as a child, perhaps four years old, with his arms outstretched in a garden full of sunflowers.
He had light eyes and a toothless smile that could make anyone laugh. Doña Rosa held her hand raised, almost touching the glass of the frame. “Doña Rosa,” Lucía called from the kitchen. The old woman lowered her hand abruptly. She turned around. “Do you know the family from before?” Lucía asked, without malice.
“The Montiels, the ones who raised him.” ” No,” Doña Rosa said, “he just reminds me of someone.” “Who?” A short pause. “And someone I lost a long time ago.” Lucía didn’t ask any more questions, but that answer lingered in her mind all morning because there was something in Doña Rosa’s voice when she said it. A kind of old, quiet pain that didn’t ask for pity, that didn’t sound like the nostalgia of a maid.
It sounded like something much deeper, something Lucía couldn’t name, but that she didn’t forget. That same afternoon, while Valeria was in her room with the door closed and the With music playing, Lucía and Doña Rosa met in the laundry room. Lucía silently folded a sheet and then, without looking at it, said softly, “Be careful with it.
” Doña Rosa continued folding. ” Why are you telling me that?” “Because I’ve been in this house for four years, and I’ve seen things.” Lucía paused. ” The maid who was here before you, Marisol, a good girl, hardworking, never caused any problems. And one day she told Mr. Alejandro that Mrs. Valeria had taken her salary. That’s all.
And three days later, Marisol packed her things and left without saying goodbye. I never heard from her again.” “Did she leave on her own, or were you made to leave?” Doña Rosa asked. Lucía looked at her. “That’s what I’m wondering too.” The silence between them lasted a few seconds.
“And why are you staying?” Doña Rosa asked. Lucía sighed. “I have two children in college. I can’t afford to look for work at my age.” She folded the last sheet. “But you’re older, Doña Rosa, no offense intended. What “What brought you here? Because with all due respect, you don’t seem to need this job.
” Doña Rosa looked her straight in the eye . “Everyone needs something, Lucía.” She said nothing more, grabbed her stack of folded clothes, and left. Lucía was left alone in the laundry room, feeling as though that answer had answered everything and nothing at the same time. That night, Valeria called Doña Rosa at the bottom of the stairs. ” The room you’re sleeping in, I need it for storage.
There’s a room in the basement. You can move in there starting today.” “The basement room doesn’t have a window, ma’am. Are you here for work or vacation?” Alejandro was three meters away on the sofa, staring at his phone. “Honey,” Valeria said, turning to him in a completely different voice. “Did n’t we say we were going to use that room for gym stuff?” Alejandro looked up.
“Yes, I think so , Doña Rosa. The basement has heating, don’t worry.” He went back to his phone. That was it. Doña Rosa took her things down to the basement without protesting. The room smelled of Dampness and old paint, a thin mattress on the floor, a lightbulb without a shade, a plastic chair. He sat on the edge of the mattress, reached inside his clothes, and pulled out a piece of paper folded many times.
He unfolded it carefully, as if opening something fragile. It was an old document with the letterhead of a family court. The writing was blurry in places, but the important words were legible. He read it, even though he already knew it by heart. He folded it again, pressed it to his chest with both hands, and remained like that in the silence of the basement, his eyes closed for a good while.
The next day, during Mr. Alejandro’s breakfast, Mrs. Rosa served the coffee and allowed herself a question she had been holding back for days. Mr. Alejandro, do you have any family here in the city? Your parents? Alejandro looked up from his newspaper. My parents died years ago, both of them. He said it without drama, as if he had already finished processing that grief.
I was an only child. I have no other family. And where are you from? If you don’t mind, I was born here, although He paused briefly, almost imperceptibly. ” I’m adopted, but I never knew my biological parents. The Montiels adopted me as a baby, and they were the best parents anyone could have.” ” Why?” he asked.
Doña Rosa calmly placed the coffeepot on the counter. For no reason. Sometimes one is curious. Alejandro looked at her for a second longer than usual. There was something about that question that didn’t seem casual, but he didn’t know why. He folded the newspaper. “Do you have family, Doña Rosa?” A short pause. “I had a son.
” I lost it when I was very young. “I’m so sorry.” “Don’t worry,” she said. “Life sometimes does things you don’t understand at the time. Ah, but there’s always a reason.” Alejandro nodded, not quite knowing what to say, and went back to his newspaper. Doña Rosa left the kitchen. In the hallway, she exhaled slowly.
The man who had just told her he had no family and was adopted had no idea what she kept in her apron pocket. On Friday, Valeria called Doña Rosa into the living room. This week there were two broken plates, a stain on the mirror in the main bathroom, and the second-floor hallway hadn’t been mopped properly. She took an envelope from the table drawer.
“I’m deducting three days’ pay.” “Ma’am, I didn’t break any plates, and the mirror is calling me a liar.” The silence was answer enough for Valeria, who closed the drawer and went out to the garden with her phone. Doña Rosa stood in the living room with the empty envelope in her hand. That night, after 11, when the house was quiet, she took out the old phone she kept hidden among the clothes at the bottom of her suitcase. She dialed a number.
She waited three rings. A man’s voice answered on the other end. “Are you inside yet?” the voice asked. “Yes,” Doña Rosa replied softly. “But we have to move quickly.” That woman is not just a bad person, Rodrigo. There’s something else, I’m sorry. What did you find? Nothing concrete yet, but some things don’t add up. I need more time.
Are you OK? A pause. I’m fine, Rosa. If at any time you feel you are in danger, I know. He cut it. But I’m not leaving. I can’t leave. Not after everything it took to get here. He hung up. She sat on the basement floor with her back against the cold wall, staring at the lit light bulb. Outside there was someone who knew why she was there.
But the audience hasn’t yet. Alejandro did not work on Sunday. She stayed home reading in the garden and in the afternoon went down to the kitchen to get some water. Doña Rosa was washing the lunch dishes. He poured himself a glass, drank it slowly, and watched her for a moment.
How have you been feeling this week, Mrs. Rosa? Has he been able to adapt? Good, sir. Valeria has treated her well. A fraction of a second. Yes sir. Alejandro nodded, but he didn’t leave . He lay down on the counter with his arms crossed. You really catch my attention . I don’t mean it in a bad way.
I don’t know, there’s just something about the way she is here. Most people who work from home move differently. You seem, he searched for the word, permanent, as if this were your home. Doña Rosa turned off the tap and looked at him. Does that bother you? No, he said. On the contrary, I find it curious. Older people move slowly, sir. Sometimes it seems like something else.
Alejandro smiled and left . Doña Rosa went back to washing dishes, but as soon as she heard his footsteps moving away, she looked up at the kitchen window that overlooked the garden and followed him with her eyes as he walked among the plants, with his hands in his pockets. completely uninvolved. The expression on her face was not that of an employee looking at her boss, it was that of a mother looking at her son.
On Wednesday of the third week, Valeria organized a meeting at home with her friends, four women of the same age, all with the same expensive haircut and the same tone of voice used when you want to sound interesting without saying anything important. They settled into the room with glasses of wine and a cheese board that Lucia had prepared.
Doña Rosa served, cleared up, and served again. At one point, Valeria called her from the sofa. Rosa, the napkin I gave Carmen is stained. Change it. Doña Rosa went, took the napkin and went to get a clean one. ” It’s just that the old lady gets distracted sometimes,” Valeria said in a low voice, but loud enough.
Age, you know, laughs. Valeria, don’t be mean, said one of them, although she also laughed. Doña Rosa returned with the clean napkin, placed it carefully, and left without saying anything. But as he did so, he clearly heard what Valeria said next, lowering her voice just enough to create a sense of confidence. Alejandro says we have to be nice to her. You know what he’s like.
A huge heart. Pause. But between us, what’s a 70-year-old woman doing cleaning other people’s houses? He has no family, he has no one. Now, imagine what a life, more laughter. Doña Rosa entered the kitchen and closed the door gently. Lucia looked at her from the stove.
Would you like a glass of water? No, thanks. He stood for a moment with his back to Lucia, then took the kitchen towel, wiped the already clean counter, and moved on. When Valeria’s friends left, one of them, the one named Carmen, the one who had said, “Valeria, don’t be mean,” lagged behind in the hallway. Doña Rosa was collecting the glasses from the living room when Carmen appeared in the doorway.
They looked at each other for a second. Carmen approached slowly, as if she didn’t want to be seen, and spoke to him in a very low voice. Hang in there, ma’am. You do n’t know me and I don’t know you, but I’ve been seeing things in this house for two years that I don’t like. A pause. Be careful with Valeria, she’s not just a bad person, she’s dangerous.
And Doña Rosa looked at her without moving. Why are you telling me that? Because last year Mr. Alejandro was very ill. Medical staff couldn’t find anything wrong, and then suddenly he got better as if nothing had happened. Carmen looked towards the door. It coincided with Valeria being out of the country for three weeks.
Doña Rosa processed that in silence. Why has n’t she said anything to him? What proof do you have? With a hunch? Alejandro is in love with that woman, or at least he thinks he is. Carmen took her purse. I just told him what I saw and he left. Doña Rosa stayed in the empty room with the glasses on the tray.
What Carmen had just told him wasn’t new information, it was confirmation. And the confirmation accelerated everything. Two days later, Valeria went to an appointment with her beautician and asked Doña Rosa to thoroughly clean the master suite. Floors, mirrors, bathrooms and closets on the outside.
It was the first time that Doña Rosa had entered that room. It started with the bathroom, then the floors. When she arrived at the dressing area, with her perfumes arranged and her cosmetics in a row, she noticed something that in another person would have gone unnoticed. Among the jars of cream and expensive perfumes were two small, unlabeled glass bottles with a clear liquid inside.
They weren’t perfume. The neck of the bottle was different, a rubber stopper, not a screw-on one. He looked at them without touching them. Then she opened the vanity drawer to clean the rail and there, under a toiletry bag, was a folded manila envelope. He couldn’t help it. He opened it carefully.
They were documents from an insurance company. The insured’s name is Alejandro Montiel Reyes. The original beneficiary had been changed with a recent notarized signature. The new beneficiary was Valeria Montiel. Amount 800 million pesos. Doña Rosa read the date of the modification three weeks ago.
She folded the envelope, returned it exactly as it was, closed the drawer, and finished cleaning the dressing table at her usual pace. On the outside, nothing changed. Inside, the clock started ticking. That same afternoon, while Doña Rosa was sweeping the second-floor corridor , she heard Valeria’s voice speaking in her room.
The door was ajar. He spoke carefully so as not to make a sound. No, Enrique, it can’t wait any longer. Pause. I know you said two months, but the situation changed. Another longer pause. I don’t care about the risk. Do what I paid you to do. Doña Rosa pressed herself against the wall. “I’ll take care of my part,” Valeria continued.
And I just need you to be available if something goes wrong on the medical side. Pause. Exact. And Enrique, leave no trace. None. The sound of footsteps towards the door. Doña Rosa walked quickly down the corridor, turned the corner, and continued sweeping as if nothing had happened. Valeria opened the door, peeked her head out, saw her at the end of the hallway with the broom, and closed it again.
Doña Rosa continued sweeping, but now she had a name, Enrique, and now she knew she wasn’t alone in this. That night, with the house silent, Doña Rosa returned to the basement room and took out the old telephone. Before calling, he wrote down the details of what he had seen and heard. The unlabeled bottles, the altered life insurance policy, the name Enrique, the phrase “leave no trace.
” He called Rodrigo. I need you to find out who this Enrique guy is , a doctor, I think. She has a relationship with Valeria Montiel. He paused and said, ” I need to take a sample of what’s in those jars.” I don’t know how yet, but I’m going to do it. Rosa, that’s very risky, Rodrigo said.
All of this is risky from day one. Do you have any idea what the liquid might be ? No, but the cook told me that Alejandro had a strange health episode last year. Months of dizziness and vomiting. The doctors said it was stress. Silence from the other side. Pink. Yes, I think the same. Oh, how long have those jars been there? I don’t know, but the insurance was changed three weeks ago.
Rodrigo, she has a plan and it’s already underway. I’m going to pull some strings. Give me 48 hours. We don’t have 48 hours to spare. Move quickly. He hung up. He stared at the paper with the notes. Then he folded it and put it inside the lining of his right shoe. On Thursday, Dr.
Enrique Salcedo, 50 years old, arrived at the mansion wearing a gray suit and carrying a leather briefcase. He arrived as if it were a social visit, with a bottle of wine in his hand and a smile that Alejandro received with a hug. “My soul brother,” said Alejandro. “How long?” ” Too much,” the doctor said. Valeria came downstairs with a smile that Doña Rosa had never seen on her face.
Broad, relaxed, genuine on the surface. “Enrique, what a joy.” Valeria, always a pleasure. They greeted each other with two kisses, nothing unusual about that. But Doña Rosa, who brought the tray of appetizers, watched them from the side and noticed what Alejandro did not notice. When Valeria and Enrique greeted each other, their eyes met for a fraction of a second before the kisses began.
A small, quick exchange, not of friends, but of accomplices who verify that everything is going according to plan. “You’re no good, Rosa,” said Alejandro. Doña Rosa served the drinks without looking at Enrique, but when she leaned towards him to serve him, the doctor glanced at her and she felt that he was evaluating her.
Not like you would evaluate a service employee, but like you would evaluate someone who could be a problem. Doña Rosa finished serving and went back to the kitchen. From the half-open door, he watched them toast. three people, two of them with a plan that the third was completely unaware of. After Dr.
Enrique’s visit, Doña Rosa looked for a moment to speak with Lucía alone. They were in the kitchen after dinner, cleaning up. Lucia, you told me that Mr. Alejandro had been ill last year. Yes, it was ugly. After months of dizziness and loss of appetite, she lost about 8 kg. The doctors tried everything and couldn’t find anything.
They said it was stress or something with his stomach, and the doctor who was treating him, Lucia thought for a moment. The one in charge was a certain Salcedo. Enrique Salcedo. He looked up. The same one who came today, Doña Rosa didn’t change her expression. And when did it improve? Almost overnight. It was when Mrs. Valeria went to visit her mother in Cali for three weeks. “It seems Mr.
Alejandro has rested,” Valeria said. Lucia frowned. Although Valeria’s mother died 4 years ago, I know that because the lady told me once. The silence between the two stretched on. ” Why are you asking me all that?” Lucia said slowly. For nothing, Doña Rosa folded the kitchen towel. Take care of your job, Lucia, and take care of yourself.
Lucía watched her leave and for the first time since Doña Rosa arrived, she began to put together pieces in her head that until that moment she had preferred not to look at. On Saturday, Valeria found Doña Rosa leaving the master suite with the bucket and mop. Who told him to go up there today? Yourself, ma’am. On Tuesday he told me to clean the entire second floor on Saturdays.
I didn’t tell him that . Yes, she did say so, ma’am. Valeria approached him. He wasn’t shouting. He spoke slowly, which is sometimes worse. Listen to me carefully. You do not enter my room without my presence. Understood? Understood? Tocbia? I only cleaned the floor and the bathroom, ma’am. Valeria stared at her. Then, unexpectedly, he gave him a shove on the shoulder. It wasn’t a hard blow.
I was the kind of push that doesn’t leave a bruise, but says exactly what it means. I know I can do it and nothing bad will happen to me . “If I find her snooping through my things again,” Valeria said, “she’s going to disappear from this house just like the one who was here before.” Did you understand me? Doña Rosa held his gaze.
Yes, ma’am. Valeria went up to the room and closed the door. Doña Rosa went downstairs with the bucket without hurrying, but as soon as she got to the kitchen, she put the bucket on the floor and leaned on the counter. His hands were trembling, not from fear, from rage. He breathed, picked up the bucket again, and continued.
The following Monday, when Valeria left for her yoga class, Doña Rosa acted, went up to the suite, went directly to the dressing table and with a cloth handkerchief so as not to leave any traces, took one of the small bottles and poured just a few drops onto a cotton ball which she kept inside a sealed plastic bag.
He returned the jar exactly as it was. At 11 o’clock, when Lucía went to the supermarket, Doña Rosa put the little bag in her coat pocket without explaining anything to her. Lucia, upon leaving the market, stop by the pharmacy on 12th Street. Ask for a gentleman named Rodrigo. Tell him that Rosa sent this and that it’s urgent.
Lucia stared at her . Doña Rosa, what is this? I don’t know, that’s why I’m sending it to be analyzed. to analyze who that Rodrigo is. It’s trustworthy. Please, Lucia, don’t tell anyone else. Lucia looked at it for a long moment, then put her hand in her pocket, checked that the small bag was secure, and nodded. Okay, but when I get back, explain to me what’s going on in this house.
And when I return, said Doña Rosa, I promise you I will. Lucía left and Doña Rosa stayed in the kitchen counting the minutes. That night, after midnight, the envelope appeared under the basement door. There was no return address, only the handwritten pink name . He opened it. Inside there was a folded sheet of paper.
She read it standing under the lampshadeless light bulb. As he moved forward, his breathing became shorter. When he finished, he lowered the sheet slowly and closed his eyes. What was on that sheet confirmed everything she suspected and added something that even she hadn’t fully grasped. The liquid in the bottles was a toxin, a compound used in laboratories that, in small and sustained doses, produced symptoms that could be confused with degenerative diseases.
slow, almost undetectable, without specific analysis. And the most serious thing, according to Rodrigo’s calculations, based on what she had described about Alejandro’s health, was that someone could have been administering it to him for more than a year. She folded the sheet of paper, put it in the lining of her shoe along with the other notes, and when she looked up, her expression was no longer that of a frightened old woman in a basement.
It was the demeanor of someone who knows exactly what she has to do and who isn’t going to stop. Dr. Enrique returned to the mansion 4 days later, this time without a bottle of wine and without the smile of the social visit. He arrived mid-morning when Alejandro was in the office and Valeria greeted him in the living room with the front door closed before he had even finished entering.
Doña Rosa was in the second-floor corridor, scrubbing the floor on her knees when she heard the voices downstairs. He went down slowly and quietly and stayed on the last step out of her field of vision. ” The test you requested came back clean at the lab in Bogotá,” Enrique said quietly. “But if someone knows exactly what to look for, they’ll find it.

” “Nobody knows what to look for,” Valeria said. “Nobody has any reason to look for it.” Are you sure? “Because if there’s a leak, Enrique.” Valeria’s voice hardened. “You messed up your part last year, that’s why it took so long. This time the deadline is clear. Before the end of the month, silence.
I need you available that night.” Valeria continued. “If anything gets complicated on the medical side, I want you to be the one to sign. Sign whatever needs signing.” Another silence. ” Valeria, this isn’t what we agreed on at the beginning. We agreed on the outcome. The method was always mine.” A pause.
“And I’ve already paid you enough to not have any scruples at this point.” Doña Rosa heard footsteps toward the door. She climbed two steps without hurrying and continued scrubbing as Enrique crossed the hallway toward the exit. The doctor glanced up at the second floor as he passed. He saw her kneeling with the rag. He kept walking.
Doña Rosa waited for the gate to open. Then she took the paper out of her shoe and added three words. Before the end of the month, that same afternoon, Alejandro arrived earlier than usual. He looked like a man who truly needed rest , not just less work. He looked tired in a way that went beyond office hours. Valeria greeted him in the living room with a smile that Doña Rosa, from the kitchen, immediately recognized.
It was the same smile from the first day, calculated, perfect. ” Love, you look exhausted.” Valeria placed her hand on his cheek. “Tonight I want it to be just the two of us. A quiet dinner, no phones.” Alejandro looked at her with something that still seemed like genuine love. “Tonight, tonight,” Valeria kissed him on the cheek.
“I’ll take care of everything.” Doña Rosa, who had heard every word from the kitchen, stood still with her hand on the counter. Tonight she had planned to have more time. She had intended to wait for Rodrigo to confirm a second test, for something more solid, for the pieces to fall into place. But Valeria had just changed the deadline.
Doña Rosa went to the basement, took out her phone, and texted Rodrigo. “There’s no more time tonight.” The reply came in two minutes. “Are you sure?” She wrote. Yes. And went upstairs to set the table for dinner. At 7 p.m., Lucía finished her shift and left. Valeria herself had asked her to. She wanted the house to herself . Doña Rosa stayed.
Valeria didn’t kick her out because she needed someone to serve. Dinner was almost ready when Valeria went into the kitchen under the pretext of checking the dessert. Doña Rosa was in the pantry looking for the oil. From there, through the gap between the door and the frame, she saw exactly what Valeria did.
The wife took the open bottle of red wine that was on the counter. She looked toward the pantry, listened for the silence, then took one of the small vials from her dress pocket , uncapped the rubber stopper, and poured four drops into the bottle. She shook it briefly, put the bottle back, and the vial disappeared into her pocket.
It all took less than 15 seconds. Doña Rosa didn’t move and waited for Valeria to come out of the kitchen. Then she came out of the pantry. With the oil in her hand, she placed the bottle on the counter and went to finish setting the table. Her hands weren’t trembling, but inside everything had sped up. Dinner began at 8.
Alejandro came downstairs in a clean shirt, his hair still damp, in a good mood for the first time in days. Valeria sat at the head of the table with the candles lit and the soft, perfectly arranged music playing. Doña Rosa served the appetizer, then the soup, then the main course. Every time she entered the dining room, she measured time, measured distances, measured Valeria, and Valeria measured her.
There was something between the two of them at that moment that Alejandro didn’t see. A tension that wasn’t the usual hostility between employee and employer. It was something else. It was two people who knew things that the man sitting at the table didn’t. “You’re not pouring the wine, Rosa,” Alejandro said.
Doña Rosa took the bottle, poured Valeria’s glass first, then approached Alejandro. Valeria watched her with narrowed eyes, not moving a muscle. Doña Rosa began to tilt the bottle over Alejandro’s glass and At that moment, Alejandro raised his glass to hold it while they poured, as well-mannered people do .
Doña Rosa saw the gesture, saw the glass, saw Valeria in the background, perfectly still, and made her decision. What happened next lasted less than three seconds, but it seemed longer. Doña Rosa placed the bottle on the table, reached out, and took the wine glass that Alejandro was holding in the air. Alejandro dropped it out of pure reflex, and Doña Rosa smashed it against the floor.
The glass shattered on the marble with a sound that filled the entire dining room. The wine spread like a dark stain, the candles flickered. No one said a word for a full two seconds . Then Valeria stood up. What did she do? Her voice was cold, sharp. Alejandro also stood up, confused. Doña Rosa, what happened? The old woman didn’t answer immediately.
She looked at the spilled wine on the floor. Then she looked at Alejandro. It slipped, sir. I’m sorry. It slipped. Valeria walked around the table. Alejandro, this woman She’s crazy. Look at her. She broke the glass intentionally. Valeria, no. Valeria pointed at Doña Rosa. I want her out of this house right now .
And call the police because that’s assault. Alejandro looked at Doña Rosa, then at the broken glass, then at his wife. Honey, calm down. Don’t ask me to calm down. Valeria’s voice was cracking with rage, but her eyes weren’t filled with tears. Her eyes were calculating: either she leaves tonight or I leave. Alejandro turned to Doña Rosa.
Doña Rosa, I need you to explain what happened. The old woman looked at him. Sir, I need a minute, please. Alejandro nodded more out of confusion than conviction. Doña Rosa left the dining room with a determined stride. Valeria stayed with Alejandro, savoring every second. Alejandro, that woman is a danger. Can’t you see something’s wrong with her? She’s been acting strangely for weeks.
Lucía has noticed it too. You can’t keep letting people like that into your house. Valeria broke a glass. No, no It was an accident. She did it on purpose. I saw it in her eyes. Alejandro ran a hand through his hair. He was tired and confused, exactly how Valeria needed him to be. Give me five minutes to talk to her.
There’s nothing to talk about. Valeria lowered her voice abruptly, as if she had calculated that shouting too much would make her lose ground. Alejandro, please, do it for me. Pay her what you owe her and have her leave tonight. Alejandro didn’t answer. He stared at the wine stain on the floor, and in that silence, Doña Rosa returned to the dining room. She walked slowly.
She had something in each hand. In her right, two small glass bottles with rubber stoppers. In her left, a manila envelope. She placed them on the table without saying a word. Alejandro looked at them, uncomprehending. Valeria looked at them and remained completely still. What is this? Alejandro asked. Open them, Doña Rosa said.
The bottles first. Alejandro took one, held it up to the candlelight. Clear liquid, no label, rubber stopper. Where did she get this? From her wife’s dressing table, or is it… among the perfumes. Valeria reacted immediately. That’s a lie, Alejandro. That woman was rummaging through my things. She found that anywhere.
And now, Valeria. Alejandro raised a hand. Silence. Alejandro opened the envelope, took out the insurance documents, and read them slowly. He turned the first page, the second, and stopped at the third, where his name appeared as the insured and Valeria’s name as the sole beneficiary. With the notarized modification date.
He looked up . When did you modify this? Valeria opened her mouth and closed it. I wanted to add you as well. Three weeks ago. Alejandro placed his finger on the page. Why, love? That ‘s a normal policy. All the marriages and the bottles. Alejandro took the two small bottles and placed them in front of her. What’s in these bottles, Valeria? The dining room was completely silent.
The candles were still burning, and for the first time since Doña Rosa arrived at that house, Valeria had no answer prepared. What Valeria did What people do next is what they do when they have no arguments and feel the ground slipping away : attack the messenger. He turned to Doña Rosa with a fury he no longer tried to hide.
“Do you know what you are?” he pointed his finger inches from her face. “A meddling old woman, a starving servant who has no family, no home, no one in this world. No one. You came here looking for exactly what: attention, money, to destroy my marriage because your life is a misery.” Doña Rosa didn’t back down. ” You’re nobody to interfere in my marriage. You’re nobody in this house.
You’re nobody anywhere.” Valeria’s voice cracked with rage. “Alejandro, do something. This woman is destroying us with lies.” Alejandro didn’t answer. He stared at Doña Rosa because there was something in the old woman’s face at that moment that left him speechless. It wasn’t fear, it wasn’t rage, it was a kind of old pain that had suddenly found its moment to surface.
His eyes filled with tears, but he didn’t let them fall immediately. She held them, and when Valeria finished screaming, when the dining room fell into that heavy silence that follows shouting, Doña Rosa reached into her apron pocket. She pulled out two things: an old document, folded many times, with the letterhead of a family court, and a more recent sheet of paper with the logo of a genetic laboratory.
She placed them on the table next to the vials and the safety pin. She looked at Alejandro and spoke. “ You’re right about one thing,” Doña Rosa said in a firm voice, though her lips trembled. “I’m nobody in this house. I have no money. I don’t have an important last name. I have nothing that you have.” Valeria opened her mouth.
“But I do have something.” Doña Rosa continued without letting her speak. I am 72 years old and looking for someone. I traveled to four cities, worked any job I could find, slept wherever they would let me, and when I learned that this person was in danger, I took a job as a maid in this house because it was the only way to reach her.
Alejandro stared at her without blinking. “What is he saying?” she asked in a low voice. Doña Rosa pushed the two documents onto the table towards him. The first is a court adoption order from 1990, signed by a family court in Medellín. She paused, and the baby was 3 days old. The mother was single, underage, and without resources.
They told him it was the best thing for the child. Alejandro took the document with hands that were beginning to lose their ability to respond. The second one, said Doña Rosa, is a DNA test. I ordered it two months before coming here. I used a hair of hers that I found on the back of the garden chair. Her voice barely broke.
The result is compatible, 99.9%. Alejandro read. He looked up and stared at her. Who are you? Doña Rosa let her tears fall. “I am nobody,” he said. I am your mother. Nobody spoke. The candles were still burning. The wine stain was still on the floor. The vials, the insurance, the adoption papers, and the DNA were all on the same table, like pieces of a puzzle that suddenly found their place.
Luis Alejandro had the documents in his hand, but he couldn’t see them. He looked at Doña Rosa, he really looked at her for the first time. How do you look at someone when you’re trying to find something to recognize and suddenly you’re afraid to find it? Valeria took advantage of the silence. Alejandro, this woman is lying.
This is a setup, a trick to shut you up. Alejandro’s voice was low, but so decisive, that Valeria took a step back. He got up from the chair, walked to the window, stood with his back to the two of them for a moment, then turned around . Why didn’t you tell me from the beginning? Doña Rosa took a while to answer, because first she had to save you.
At that moment, quick footsteps were heard in the corridor. Lucía appeared in the dining room doorway wearing her coat as if she had just arrived running. Mr. Alejandro, he said, his voice trembling. Excuse me for interrupting, but there’s a gentleman outside who says that Mrs. Rosa called him.
He says he has information you need to hear. Valeria reacted. He turned towards the door. Lucia, not understanding exactly what she was doing, but acting on instinct, stood on the threshold and did not move. Valeria looked at her. Lucía held her gaze and Valeria, for the first time in history, had nowhere to go.
Rodrigo entered the mansion 10 minutes later. He was a man of about 45 years old, thin, with glasses and a folder under his arm. He wasn’t a police officer, he was a private investigator and had been working with Doña Rosa for 7 months. Alejandro heard them both in the living room, with Valeria locked in the upstairs room and Lucía sitting in the kitchen not knowing where to go.
Rodrigo placed the folder on the living room table . Mr. Montiel, the liquid in the bottles was analyzed in a laboratory in Bogotá. It is a compound derived from aconitine, a natural toxin that in small and repeated doses produces neurological symptoms, dizziness, fatigue, and digestive problems. He paused.
In higher cumulative doses it can cause cardiac arrest which in many cases is diagnosed as natural death. Alejandro said nothing. “ The symptoms you had last year exactly match those of mild intoxication from this substance,” Rodrigo continued. “ And Dr. Enrique Salcedo, according to documents I obtained, has an 80 million peso debt with a private lender that was paid off in full four months ago with a transfer from an account in Valeria Montiel’s name.
” Alejandro closed his eyes for a second, then opened them and looked at Doña Rosa, who was sitting across the table with her hands on her knees. “How long have you been looking for me?” he asked her. “ 35 years,” she replied. Alejandro called the police at 10:30 p.m. Two patrol cars arrived within 20 minutes.
Rodrigo handed over the folder with all the documentation: the lab results, the records of the transfer to Dr. Salcedo, the amended insurance documents, and the audio recording Doña Rosa had made from the hallway the day she overheard the conversation between Valeria and Enrique. An old phone hidden in her apron pocket.
Valeria came downstairs when she heard the voices of the police officers. She came with her hair loose and red eyes, but still composed, still trying to control the situation. “This is a misunderstanding,” she told the officer in a voice she had used all her life to get her way. “That woman is an imposter.” He entered my house with false documents. “Mrs.
Montiel,” the officer said, “please accompany us .” “Do not touch me.” Valeria stepped back. “Alejandro, say something. I’m your wife.” Alejandro looked at her from the bottom of the stairs. He said nothing. Valeria looked at Lucia who was in the hallway. “Lucía, you know this is a lie. You’ve lived here for four years.
Tell them.” Lucía lowered her eyes. “I’m sorry, ma’am.” When the officers handcuffed her , Valeria began to cry. Not from guilt, from rage. But the crying was real and loud, and she begged for forgiveness with the same words she had denied Doña Rosa for weeks. No one in that room said it aloud, but everyone thought it. Dr.
Enrique Salcedo was arrested that same night at his apartment. When the police knocked on his door, he opened it in his bathrobe, looking like a man who had been waiting for hours for this to happen. He didn’t resist. He sat on the sofa, took off his glasses, and placed them on the coffee table very carefully, as if it were the last thing he was going to do calmly for a long time.
“How many know?” he asked. “Everyone,” the officer said. Enrique nodded slowly. As they handcuffed him, he said something that the officer included in the report and that Rodrigo later told Doña Rosa. She told me it was to protect himself, that he was Violent, living in fear. A pause. I knew it was a lie, but the debt was enormous. That was all.
There were no further explanations. The next day, the experts reviewed Alejandro’s medical records and found something that the previous year had been filed as an atypical case of unknown origin. Minimal levels of aconitine in a blood test that no one at the time could identify because no one was looking for it. Someone had seen it, though.
The doctor who signed that test was the same Dr. Enrique Salcedo. The next day, Alejandro and Doña Rosa sat in the living room. There were no cameras, no other people, just the two of them. And the silence of a house that suddenly seemed larger and emptier than before. “Tell me everything,” he said. Doña Rosa spoke for almost an hour.
She was 16 when she became pregnant. The baby’s father disappeared when he found out. She was the youngest daughter of a poor family in Medellín; her own father had kicked her out of the house. A social worker at the hospital where she gave birth told her about a A family wanted to adopt, had the resources, and could give the child what she couldn’t.
They told me that if I truly loved him, I should let him go, said Doña Rosa, that it was best for him. She signed the documents three days after giving birth. They placed the baby in her arms for a moment, just a moment. Then they took him away. “I spent years believing I had done the right thing,” she said.
Then I spent years hating myself for having believed it. Alejandro listened to her without interrupting. How did you find me? Little by little, court records, names of the adoptive family. The death of your adoptive parents was reported in the newspapers when the company inheritance was announced .
That’s where I saw your photo for the first time. He paused and I knew it was you. I do n’t know how to explain it, I just knew. And Valeria? Alejandro asked. How did you know about Valeria before entering the house? Doña Rosa crossed her hands on her lap. Rodrigo has been helping me for years. He is the son of a neighbor who helped me when I had nothing.
When I found you, I asked him to investigate your surroundings. He paused. It took him three months to get information about Valeria. What he found wasn’t rumors, it was a pattern. What kind of pattern? Before you, Valeria was engaged to a man in Cali, also a businessman. The engagement broke down in a strange way and he was left with health problems.
which no one could explain well. Rodrigo found his sister. The sister said that he always believed Valeria had put something in his food, but he couldn’t prove it and nobody believed him. Alejandro remained silent. When Rodrigo told me that Valeria was married to you, continued Doña Rosa, and that you had no other family, that you were adopted and that you lived alone with her.
I understood that I couldn’t just stay waiting outside. What if you were wrong, and what if Valeria wasn’t what you thought? Doña Rosa looked directly at him. Then you would have thrown me out of the house like a crazy old maid, and I would have left knowing at least that you were okay. Alejandro did not respond. He looked at his hands for a moment, then looked at the woman sitting in front of him.
Lucia entered the room with two cups of coffee and placed them on the table without saying anything. She was about to leave, but Doña Rosa called her. “Stay, Lucia.” The cook stood by the door, arms crossed and eyes red from a sleepless night. “You didn’t know anything about this,” Doña Rosa told her, “But you helped me anyway.
Without the sample you took from the house, there was no analysis. Without the analysis, there was no proof.” “I didn’t know what I was carrying,” Lucía said softly. “I know, that’s why you did it.” Doña Rosa held her gaze. ” Good people help without knowing why. That’s the hardest thing to find in this world.
” Lucía pressed her lips together; they trembled. “I worked for that woman for four years ,” she said. And I, I saw things, things I didn’t want to see because I was afraid of losing my job. His voice broke. Last year, when Mr. Alejandro was so sick, I put his lunch in bed and I thought, I thought something wasn’t right, but I didn’t say anything.
” You said something when it mattered,” said Doña Rosa. That’s what matters. Lucia wiped her eyes with the back of her hand and left the room without finishing her coffee. Alejandro looked at Doña Rosa. You are the only person in this story who acted without thinking about herself. Doña Rosa shook her head.
He was acting on my behalf, only what I wanted wasn’t money. That afternoon, Alejandro reviewed the documents that Doña Rosa had brought in her cloth suitcase. The adoption order, the DNA results, some old papers from their search over the years. And in the background, in a small envelope that Doña Rosa took out without saying anything and placed on the table, there was a photograph.
Alejandro took it. It was a black and white image, out of focus, taken with a cheap camera. A young woman, no more than 16 years old, with long hair and huge eyes, was sitting on a hospital bed wearing a white gown and carrying a newborn baby against her chest. He held it with both arms as if the whole world depended on him not letting go.
On the back, in crooked and irregular handwriting, like someone who learned to write late, it said, “My Alejandro, I will always find you.” It took Alejandro a while to be able to speak. “How old were you here?” “16.” He kept looking at the photo. “How many years did you look for me?” 35. A pause.
There were times when I didn’t even have enough to eat, but I always saved the money for transportation to keep looking. Alejandro placed the photo on the table very slowly, leaned forward, put his elbows on his knees, covered his face with his hands, and cried silently, without drama. She just cried. Two weeks later the legal process began .
Carmen and Valeria’s friend, who had whispered warnings to Doña Rosa that afternoon in the corridor, came forward as a witness without anyone asking her twice. Sitting in front of the prosecutor, she declared what she knew, that during the last year she had noticed strange changes in Valeria’s behavior, that in several meetings she had heard her ask questions about insurance policies and about how difficult it was to detect certain compounds in an autopsy, that when Alejandro was sick, Valeria did not show any wifely distress.
He showed impatience. “Why didn’t you report it earlier?” the prosecutor asked. Carmen took a while to respond. Why was I afraid of being wrong? Because Valeria was very convincing and because you don’t want to believe that someone you know is capable of something like that .
Her testimony, combined with the laboratory analysis and audio recording, the insurance documents, and the statement of Dr. Enrique Salcedo himself, who ended up collaborating with the prosecution in exchange for a reduction of charges, built a case that Valeria’s defense attorney could not dismantle. Valeria did not cry again in the courtroom .
She stood still, staring straight ahead, as if she had finally decided to stop acting. The sentence was read on a Tuesday at 11 a.m. Valeria Montiel, 12 years in prison for attempted aggravated homicide and fraud with the aggravating factor of premeditation. Loss of all assets acquired during the marriage through fraudulent means.
The life insurance policy was cancelled. Dr. Enrique Salcedo, 6 years with the possibility of reduction for collaboration with the prosecution and definitive suspension of his medical license in the courtroom and Alejandro was sitting in the second row. Beside her , Doña Rosa. When the judge finished reading, there was no applause or celebration.
It was the silence of people who have been through too much to be happy about something that should never have happened. Valeria was taken out of the room without looking at anyone. Doña Rosa watched her until she disappeared through the side door. There was no triumph in his gaze. There was something more difficult to name, the relief of someone who carried an enormous weight for a long time and can suddenly let go of it, not because the weight was worth it, but because it is finally over. Alejandro took her
hand. She didn’t let go of him. Three weeks later, in the mansion that was now solely Alejandro’s, the large dining room table was set for two. Alejandro had cooked himself, not well, but with enthusiasm, and had bought flowers from the market, not from a florist, and had placed them in the center of the table without any special arrangement.
They were a little crooked in the vase. He didn’t care. Doña Rosa went downstairs from the room, which was now hers, the one on the second floor, with a window overlooking the garden, wearing a clean blouse and with her hair tied up. He stopped when he saw the table. “You cooked it.” “I tried,” he said from the kitchen.
“If it’s bad, I already know whose fault it is.” “Whose?” “From the person who didn’t teach me how to cook for 35 years.” Doña Rosa smiled. A slow smile, the kind that can’t be faked, settled at the head of the table. Alejandro came out of the kitchen with two plates and put them down. He sat down opposite her and looked at her.
That place is nice . She looked at the chair, she looked at the living room, and she looked at the photos on the wall. Those photos that she had stopped in front of so many times without being able to say anything. Yes, he said, it’s where it should have been from the beginning. They ate without grand words, without speeches, just two people who had been lost for a lifetime and who finally, after all, were sitting at the same table.
Some people believe that time erases everything, that what is lost in youth cannot be recovered in old age. that money protects and love is a luxury. Doña Rosa had slept in a basement, eaten cold leftovers, and endured humiliations that would have broken anyone. Not for money, not for revenge, for the only reason that truly motivates someone to never give up .
And karma, which sometimes takes its time but never forgets, had taken care of the rest. And so we come to the end of today’s story. We invite you to subscribe if you haven’t already so you don’t miss our latest releases. It makes us very happy to be your company day after day. We send you a huge hug and wish many blessings for you and your loved ones. Blessings.