His Neighbor Heard Screams at Home. Then He Hid Under the Bed-mdue - Chainityai

His Neighbor Heard Screams at Home. Then He Hid Under the Bed-mdue

Tomás Medina used to measure fatherhood in things he could count. Rent paid before the fifth. Groceries in the refrigerator. Shoes bought before Lucía’s toes pressed against the front. A repaired faucet. A locked door.

At 43, he had hands hardened by cement dust and a back that ached before sunrise. He worked at a construction site in Tlalnepantla, leaving early and returning with gray powder in the lines of his palms.

Verónica, his wife, worked at a dental clinic. Her mornings began before the sky had color, with keys clicking in the hallway and perfume fading behind her. Their marriage had become efficient, tired, and quiet.

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Lucía was 15, and Tomás had confused quiet with safety. She still said good morning. She still wore her uniform. She still answered when spoken to. But she no longer filled the hall with music or laughter.

That was the part Tomás avoided admitting later. The house had changed before Doña Estela ever spoke. The warning had not arrived out of nowhere. It had simply been the first warning he could no longer ignore.

The neighbor told him she had heard a girl screaming inside his house, but he thought it was gossip… until he hid under his bed and heard his daughter beg, “Stop!”

Doña Estela did not deliver the warning like a woman eager to create scandal. She held the gate bars with both hands and spoke softly, almost apologetically, as if the words themselves were dangerous.

“Tomás, forgive me for interfering, but in the afternoons I hear a girl screaming inside your house,” she said. “Not once. More than once.”

Tomás’s first reaction was embarrassment. Men who work hard often mistake concern for accusation. He heard her words and felt them land on his pride before they reached his fear.

“There’s nobody home at that hour,” he told her. Lucía should have been at school. Verónica should have been at work. The house should have been empty, locked, and still.

But Doña Estela only said, “Then you don’t know what happens in there.” She did not blink when she said it. That was what stayed with him after he closed the door.

Inside, Verónica dismissed it with a tired sigh. “Lonely people hear things,” she said, rubbing the red mark her purse strap had left on her shoulder. “Don’t feed it, Tomás.”

He wanted the simple explanation. He wanted the neighbor to be mistaken, the sound to be television, the fear to be foolish. A man can live a long time on explanations that protect him from responsibility.

Still, at 8:17 that night, he wrote the time on the back of a folded work order from the Tlalnepantla site. Later, he would remember how strange that felt, as if his hand knew the truth before he did.

Two days later, Doña Estela came again. She looked less like a gossip and more like someone who had slept badly because another person’s child was suffering too close to her wall.

“Today she screamed louder,” she said. “She said, ‘Please, leave me alone.’ You have to check.”

That sentence broke something loose in Tomás. He wanted to be angry at the neighbor because anger was easier than picturing Lucía alone in the house, begging someone unseen to stop.

He did not shout. He tightened his hand around his keys until the teeth pressed crescents into his palm, then went upstairs that night and knocked on Lucía’s door.

She was on the bed with headphones over her ears and her phone glowing in her hands. The screen made her face look smaller, almost blue. She removed one earbud when he entered.

“Everything okay, mija?” he asked.

“Yes, Papá. Everything’s normal.”

The word normal stayed with him. It sounded practiced. It sounded like a lid pushed down over boiling water.

The next morning, Tomás made a decision that felt dishonest and necessary. He drank coffee from the chipped blue mug, put on his jacket, kissed Verónica goodbye, and let Lucía leave in her uniform.

At 7:43 a.m., he drove three blocks away, parked where nobody from the house would see the truck, and walked back. In his pocket were the work order, a grocery receipt, and a screenshot from Lucía’s school attendance app showing first-period attendance.

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