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SIN PADRES Y CON UNA HERMANITA QUE CUIDAR… Ellos Enfrentaban Todo Para no Verla Pasar Hambre

No Parents and a Little Sister to Protect… They Faced Everything So She Would Never Go Hungry

The first time I stole bread, I did not do it because I was bad.

I did it because my little sister, Lucía, had stopped crying.

People think hunger makes children scream, beg, throw tantrums. Sometimes it does. But the kind of hunger that truly scares you is silent. It folds a child into herself. It makes her eyes too big for her face. It makes her fingers tremble when she tries to tie her shoes. It makes a seven-year-old girl look at an empty plate and say, “It’s okay, Adrián. I’m not that hungry,” even though her stomach has been growling loud enough to hear from the other side of the room.

That morning in Valencia, rain hit the windows of our rented room like little stones. The ceiling leaked near the mattress where Lucía slept curled under my father’s old jacket. The electricity had been cut three days earlier. The landlord had banged on the door twice before sunrise, shouting that if we did not pay by Friday, he would throw our things into the street.

Our things.

Two backpacks. Three photographs. A cracked phone with no credit. A plastic bag of clothes that smelled permanently of damp walls. And Lucía’s stuffed rabbit, Nube, with one missing eye.

I was seventeen years old, though I had not felt seventeen for a long time. Not since the night our mother died in the hospital and our father vanished six months later, leaving only a note that said, “I’ll come back when I can breathe again.”

He never came back.

At school, they used to tell us that Spain had systems, offices, laws, people who helped. Maybe that was true. But systems move with papers, appointments, signatures, stamps, waiting rooms, and adults who know what to say. We had none of that. We had a room we could barely afford and a child who needed breakfast.

So I walked into the bakery on Calle de la Reina with water dripping from my hair, my hands shoved deep into my sleeves, and my heart beating so hard I thought the woman behind the counter could hear it.

The smell almost killed me.

Fresh bread. Butter. Coffee. Sugar. Warmth.

I saw a tray of small rolls near the counter. One of them had fallen slightly to the side, as if it wanted to escape. I looked at the woman. She was busy wrapping pastries for a man in a grey coat. I looked at the door. Then at the roll.

My hand moved before my conscience did.

I slipped it into my jacket and turned.

“Hey!”

The word cracked across the bakery.

I froze.

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