The traffic light had been red for less than ten seconds when my life split into a before and an after.
It was one of those suffocating afternoons when the city seemed to sweat through concrete.
Heat shimmered above the hood of my car.-..
Horns kept colliding from every direction, impatient and sharp, and motorcycles slipped between lanes with inches to spare.
I had the air conditioning on high, but it still felt as though the day had found a way inside with me.
I had chosen to drive myself home from the hospital.
The appointment had been routine.
My cardiologist had repeated what he always told me these days: less stress, less salt, less anger.
He spoke in that patient, careful tone doctors use when they know you are listening but not obeying.
At sixty-six, I had survived enough boardrooms, betrayals, and family disasters to know my body no longer forgave me the way it once had.
But there are some kinds of anger no prescription can prevent.
I was staring through the windshield, half-listening to the radio, when I noticed a woman weaving between cars.
She had a baby strapped to her chest in a faded front carrier.
In one hand she held a few coins.
With the other, she tapped lightly on windows, asking in the silent, defeated way people do when pride has already been stripped from them.
At first I felt the dull ache of pity.
Then she turned her face toward my lane.
My hand flew to the window controls before my mind had fully caught up.
“Sofía.”
My daughter froze.
For one brutal second, she looked like a child caught stealing food.
Her eyes widened.
Shame flooded her face so fast it almost changed her features.
She raised her hand instinctively as if she could hide from me, but it was too late.
I had already seen her gaunt cheeks, the dirt on her clothes, the cracked skin on her lips, the blackened soles of her bare feet.
And I had seen the baby.
Valentina’s little face was red from the heat, her tiny mouth parted in discomfort, her head resting against Sofía’s chest with the limp heaviness of a child who had been too hot for too long.
I pushed the passenger door open.
“Get in.
Now.”
“Dad, please,” she whispered.
“Not here.”
“Get in, Sofía.”
The light was still red.
Cars behind me erupted into horns.
A man leaned out of his truck window and shouted something I never heard because all the blood in my body was rushing in my ears.
Sofía glanced over her shoulder with pure panic, then ducked into the car and pulled the door shut.
The cabin filled with heat, baby formula, sweat, and the faint metallic sound of coins clutched too tightly in her fist.
For a moment neither of us spoke.
She kept her head down and adjusted the carrier on her chest, checking Valentina before she looked at me.
I had not seen my daughter in three weeks.
Three weeks of short phone calls, delayed replies, and excuses that had bothered me without giving me proof.
She had sounded tired each time.
Distracted.
Guarded.
But I had convinced myself that new motherhood was hard, that marriage wore people down, that stress explained more