When Her Husband Confessed, Her Father Took Off His Watch-Quieen - Chainityai

When Her Husband Confessed, Her Father Took Off His Watch-Quieen

Lucía used to think birthdays were supposed to make a house gentler. Even when money was tight, even when work was hard, there had always been a small cake, a candle, and her father’s careful smile.

Armando had raised her with rough hands and a soft voice. He had spent decades as a mechanic, coming home with oil under his nails and a silver watch strapped to his wrist like a promise.

That watch was the one object Lucía remembered from every childhood morning. It tapped against the table when he poured coffee. It flashed under garage lights when he lifted engines. It meant patience, labor, restraint.

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After her mother died, birthdays became smaller but not colder. Armando still bought something sweet from the neighborhood bakery. He still called her his girl, even when she was grown and married.

Héctor had seemed charming at first. He knew how to smile at waiters, how to open doors in public, how to say the right thing while other people were watching.

In private, his kindness became a schedule she could never predict. Some days he ignored her. Other days he corrected her clothes, her tone, her cooking, even the way she breathed when she was tired.

Beatriz, his mother, always called it marriage. She said men had tempers. She said women had to be wise. She said a home survived when a wife stopped making every small thing a tragedy.

Lucía heard those sentences so often that they began to sound like kitchen appliances, humming in the background until she almost forgot they were there. Almost, but never completely.

The night before her 32nd birthday, Héctor came home late. He smelled of cologne, street air, and the beer he insisted was not enough to count as drinking.

Lucía had placed one small candle on the counter, not because she expected a party, but because some stubborn part of her still wanted to be remembered inside her own house.

When Héctor saw it, he laughed. Not loudly. Worse than loudly. He laughed like her hope was something childish he had found lying on the floor.

“You got sentimental because I forgot?” he asked, dropping his keys into a dish. “You’re 32, Lucía. Stop acting like a little girl waiting for applause.”

She told him she was not asking for applause. She was asking to be seen. The words came out small, but they were still words, and that was enough to anger him.

The slap landed before she finished speaking. Her cheek burst with heat. Her lip split against her tooth. She tasted copper, sugar from the candle frosting, and the sudden shame of being hit in her own kitchen.

She did not fall. That detail stayed with her later. She remained standing, one hand on the counter, because some instinct in her body refused to give him the satisfaction.

Héctor grabbed her arm hard enough to leave finger marks. He leaned close and told her to clean up the candle before his mother arrived in the morning.

Beatriz came early, carrying flowers she had not bought for Lucía. They were for the table, she explained, because a birthday should look nice if Armando was coming.

Lucía stood in the bathroom and pressed makeup into her cheek. The bruise drank through it anyway, purple under beige powder. Her lip had swollen just enough to change the shape of her mouth.

She chose the beige dress her mother had given her years before. The fabric was soft at the shoulders, almost tender, and that tenderness made her want to cry.

By the time Armando arrived, the kitchen smelled like coffee, frosting, and the damp cardboard of the cake box he held against his chest. He stepped inside smiling, already saying her name.

Then he stopped.

He did not look at the cake. He did not look at Beatriz arranging plates. He did not look at Héctor leaning back in his chair as if he owned the morning.

He looked at Lucía’s face.

The room narrowed around that look. Lucía felt the glass of the patio door behind her, the table edge near her fingers, the air caught in her throat.

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