After 10 days in the hospital, I returned home thinking I would finally rest, but something I had never imagined was waiting for me at the door.My daughter-in-law, Valeria, looked at me intently and said coldly, “My parents have already moved here, you better not bother them.”I just took a deep breath and smiled calmly.“Enjoy it while you can,” I thought silently, because what I was about to discover would change everything.I was in the taxi, still in pain from hip surgery, clutching my old cloth bag.My heart was full of hope. I would finally return to the home that Andrés, my late husband, and I had built with so much effort in the Jacaranda neighborhood.I imagined my son Daniel’s smile or my granddaughter Camila’s hug.ut no one came to pick me up at the hospital. No one called, no one asked how I was.I filled out the exit paperwork myself, called the taxi, and kept repeating in my head,
“Mybe they are busy. Are they waiting for me at home?”When the driver asked for directions, I answered with a trembling voice: Number 22, Jacaranda Street, the White House with its blue gate.I looked out the window, remembering Daniel’s walks as a child, the afternoons in the garden with Andrés. But when I arrived, a feeling of foreboding struck me. In the yard stood an unfamiliar black pickup truck. The gate was ajar. I gently knocked on the wooden door.It was Daniel who opened it.His face was no longer that of the loving son I knew, but that of a stranger.I’m here, son,” I whispered excitedly.n a dry voice, he blurted out the words that broke my heart. “You can’t come in here.”I froze. I thought I’d heard wrong.“What did you say, Daniel?” I asked with a trembling voice.I tried to move forward, but he blocked the entrance.Behind me appeared Valeria, my daughter-in-law, holding little Camila in her arms.Her eyes scanned me from head to toe, as if I were an old piece of furniture