For nearly two months, Leonardo drifted through Plaza Fundadores as though he were moving through a world that no longer belonged to him.Since his father’s death in early autumn, life had continued at its usual pace—vendors shouting over baskets of corn, children chasing laughter across the stones, couples pausing to hold hands by the fountain—but Leonardo felt sealed off from it all.At thirty-nine, he possessed everything people admired: a thriving real estate empire, a spotless home in Colinas del Valle, and a name that opened doors. Yet the silence waiting for him every night felt heavier than any loss he had known before.His father used to say it bluntly, without sentiment: “Go where people live their real lives. Money will never teach you what being human means.” Leonardo had always nodded, always agreed—and almost never followed that advice. Now, stripped of schedules and guarded routines, he wandered alone. No assistants. No phone calls. Just his footsteps and the echo of something unfinished.
That afternoon, November carried the scent of warm tortillas and damp soil from freshly watered flowerbeds. The shadows of tall trees stretched across the plaza, and the fountain murmured steadily, as if reminding the city that some things endure no matter what breaks. Leonardo paused, closed his eyes, and tried to locate the ache inside him. His father’s face surfaced in his memory—hollowed by illness, fingers gripping his hand with unexpected force. A grip that said don’t look away now.Drawn toward the quieter edge of the plaza, Leonardo noticed a bench tucked beneath a broad ash tree. What caught his attention wasn’t spectacle or drama—it was restraint.A young woman sat there, her frame slight, her posture tense. Resting on her knees was a white cooking pot. At her sides were two children: a boy around eight, hair cut unevenly, and a younger girl with eyes far too large for her thin face. Their clothes were clean but worn thin, preserved by care rather than abundance.The woman—Karina—opened the pot and began to serve the food. She filled two portions generously and passed them to the children. Then she scraped together what remained for herself—a serving so small it barely deserved the name.
Leonardo stopped breathing.