Mrs. Sterling appeared one afternoon dressed entirely in black, as if she had already buried her son, even though no one had seen a body. She entered the house without knocking. She looked at the freshly swept floors, the blankets hanging in the sun, and the children sitting around the table eating beans and warm tortillas.
Her mouth tightened with distaste.
“It’s time to accept the truth,” she said, adjusting the rosary between her bony fingers. “Gabriel isn’t coming back.”
Clara stopped eating. Matthew looked down. And Lily ran to hide behind my skirt. I kept pouring water as if I hadn’t heard her. Mrs. Sterling walked slowly through the kitchen.
“My son was a good man. He deserves rest. Not for some opportunist to keep living off his name.”
Thomas stood up so fast he knocked over his chair. “She feeds us!”
Silence fell heavy. It was the first time Thomas had ever defended me. Mrs. Sterling looked at him, horrified. “Has that woman turned you against me?”
“I don’t need anyone to tell me anything,” he spat. “You didn’t even come to see us before.”
The old woman turned pale. Then she pointed directly at me. “Don’t think this house belongs to you, girl. If Gabriel is dead, everything passes to the Sterling family.”
That’s when I understood. She didn’t care about the children. She cared about the land. The cattle. The house. Gabriel had more than the town imagined, and while everyone thought I was a gold-digger, others were already waiting to divide the spoils.
The next morning, I found Thomas sitting outside, sharpening a stick as if it were a knife.
“What are you doing?” I asked.
“If my grandmother tries to kick us out, I’m not letting her.”
The boy didn’t look like a child anymore. The war had reached this house even with Gabriel far away. “You don’t have to fight alone,” I told him.
Thomas glanced at me. “Why do you do all this?”
I took a moment to answer. At first, it had been hunger. Desperation. But at some point, those children stopped being a burden. They became mine.
“Because someone has to stay,” I finally replied.
That afternoon, the real trouble began. Two men arrived on horseback. They didn’t look like soldiers; they looked like vultures.
“We’re here for the Captain’s debt,” said the one with a scar across his face.
“What debt?” I asked.
He laughed. “Men at war always owe something.”
I realized then that Gabriel hadn’t just left a family behind. He’d left trouble. Thomas stepped into the yard, trying to be brave, but the man grabbed his face roughly. Before I could think, I threw a pot of boiling water over the man. He screamed, letting the boy go.
I grabbed the machete Gabriel kept by the door. My legs were shaking, but I raised it anyway. “Get out of here.”
They left, but the man with the scar spat on the ground. “Tell the Captain time’s up.”
The following months were brutal. Food was scarce. I sold the last good blanket to buy medicine when Rose fell ill with a fever. I often pretended to eat so there would be enough for them. And yet, slowly, the house changed. Matthew learned to read with me at night. Clara started singing again while she swept. And Lily…
Lily started calling me “Mama” when she was sleepy. The first time she did it, she froze, as if she’d committed a sin. I stayed still, too. Then I just picked her up. I didn’t correct her.
A year after Gabriel left, the town was convinced he was dead. Mrs. Sterling insisted every week: “Sign the papers and give me the house. You’re young, you can find another man.”
But then, I found the letters.
I was cleaning Gabriel’s old wardrobe when I discovered a false bottom. Inside were envelopes. Dozens of them. All addressed to the children. All opened. None ever delivered.
I recognized the handwriting immediately. Gabriel.
Thomas read one of the letters aloud, trembling. “Son, I’m still alive. Not a day goes by that I don’t think of you…”
I felt a rage so great I couldn’t breathe. Mrs. Sterling had hidden the letters. All this time, Gabriel had been writing. All this time, the children thought their father had abandoned them. And he thought they had never answered.
I went to Mrs. Sterling’s house that night. I threw the letters onto her lap.
“How could you do this to them?”
She tried to stay firm. “Gabriel needed to focus on the war.”
“They are his children!”
The old woman pressed her lips together and finally said the truth: “My son should never have married you.”
There it was. The contempt. The obsession with controlling Gabriel’s life even from afar. “I thought if he stopped writing, you’d all eventually split up,” she admitted. “He would come to his senses.”
I left before I did something I’d regret.
One afternoon in August, I heard hooves approaching. Thomas ran out first and stopped dead. A man was slowly dismounting a thin, dust-covered horse. He had a beard, a new scar across his brow, and the tired eyes of someone who had seen too much.
It was Gabriel.
Lily let out a scream so loud it startled the chickens. “DADDY!”
They all ran to him. All except me. I stayed by the clothesline. I didn’t know what place I held in this story anymore. Gabriel fell to his knees, hugging his children desperately, sobbing like a child in the middle of the yard.
“I thought you were dead… My God… I thought something had happened…”
Thomas looked at him, confused. “Dead? You stopped writing to us!”
Gabriel raised his head slowly. “What?”
Clara ran inside and came back with the letters tied in a ribbon. Gabriel began to read them one by one. His face changed—from confusion to disbelief, and finally to a rage so cold it terrified me.
“Who did this?”
No one answered, but he already knew.
He went to see his mother that night. Alone. When he returned hours later, his gaze was broken. He never told us exactly what happened. He just sat at the table and looked at the house in silence. The clean walls. The bathed children. The warm food.
Then he looked at me directly for the first time since he’d returned. “You kept them alive.”
I didn’t know what to say. Suddenly, all the nights without eating and all the loneliness crashed down on me at once. Gabriel pulled something from his pocket. It was my old pair of earrings. The ones I had sold months ago.
“The shopkeeper told me,” he said.
Tears burned my eyes. Gabriel took a deep breath. “I brought you here out of necessity, Inez. I thought I was buying help for my children.” He looked around slowly. “But you gave them a family.”
I felt like I was going to break. No one had ever thanked me before. Lily appeared, wrapping her arms around my waist. And then something happened I never imagined.
Gabriel opened his arms. Not as a Captain, not as a proud man, but as someone tired of losing everything. And for the first time in my life… someone made me feel that staying had been worth it.