The Cast Held a Secret His Stepmother Never Wanted Found-nhu9999 - Chainityai

The Cast Held a Secret His Stepmother Never Wanted Found-nhu9999

Rodrigo Santillán used to believe that grief made a house quieter. After Elena died of cancer, he learned the opposite. Grief made every hallway louder, because every room still remembered her voice.

Mateo was only 10 years old, but he had already learned how absence could become a routine. He brushed his teeth under Elena’s photograph, slept with her picture near his pillow, and asked Doña Lupita questions Rodrigo could not answer.

Doña Lupita had worked for the Santillán family since Mateo was a baby. She knew which blanket helped him sleep, which soup he wanted when he was sick, and how Elena used to sing softly after chemotherapy.

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For 3 months after the funeral, Rodrigo locked himself in his office and pretended business calls were the reason he did not come upstairs. Doña Lupita was the one who sat beside Mateo when the boy cried.

Then Camila entered the house, beautiful, composed, and careful. She never insulted Elena directly. She simply rearranged things. A vase moved. A scarf disappeared. A photograph was shifted away from the center of the room.

Rodrigo wanted to believe it was healing. Camila said a house could not move forward if it kept staring at ghosts. He let her change curtains, replace candles, and choose where Elena’s portrait should hang.

The trust signal was small, and that made it worse. Rodrigo gave Camila access to Mateo’s room, the school schedule, the medicine cabinet, and the authority of a woman he wanted his son to respect.

Mateo never did. He grew quieter when Camila entered. His shoulders tightened at dinner. More than once, Doña Lupita found him in the hallway outside Elena’s old room, as if checking whether his mother still existed somewhere.

The fracture happened at school on a Thursday afternoon. Mateo fell during recess, and the school nurse called Rodrigo’s office at 2:12 p.m. The injury form said he landed badly on his right arm near the playground steps.

Rodrigo met Camila at the trauma clinic, where the doctor set the bone and applied the cast. The discharge sheet warned them to keep the arm still, watch for swelling, and return if pain became severe.

That first night, Mateo said the cast felt wrong. Rodrigo believed that. Broken bones hurt. Children panicked. The doctor had warned him pain might spike when the swelling began.

By the second night, Mateo was crying so hard his voice cracked. He said something was crawling inside. He begged Rodrigo to take the cast off. Camila stood behind the father and shook her head slowly.

“The doctor said not to touch it,” she reminded him. “If we open it because he has an anxiety episode, we could damage the bone.”

Rodrigo called the clinic. The receptionist told him to monitor swelling and come in if there was fever, discoloration, or loss of sensation. Camila called a psychiatrist she knew and used a softer voice.

The messages arrived neatly after that: possible anxiety episode, urgent evaluation, self-harm risk, temporary hospitalization if he insists on hurting himself. Each phrase sounded official enough to make Rodrigo doubt his own instincts.

Cruelty is most convincing when it arrives with paperwork, a calm voice, and someone else’s signature. Rodrigo did not understand that yet. He only knew he was tired and terrified.

For 4 nights, the house became a place of interrupted sleep. Mateo kicked at the sheets. He slammed the cast against the wall. He accused Camila of entering his room when Rodrigo was away.

He said she talked about Elena. He said she told him dead mothers could not protect anyone. He said Camila looked at him as if he were something blocking a doorway.

Camila cried when Rodrigo asked her. Not loudly. Not messily. Just enough to look wounded. She said Mateo resented her, that grief was turning into hostility, and that Rodrigo was letting a child punish a living woman for not being dead.

Rodrigo hated himself for considering it. But exhaustion wears down love in ugly ways. By the fourth night, his son’s pain sounded, to him, like danger instead of warning.

That was the night Mateo begged him to cut off his arm.

Guadalajara had turned cold after rain, and the bedroom smelled of wet earth through the balcony crack. Mateo’s face was soaked with tears. His fingers were swollen inside the cast, and sweat shone along his hairline.

“Dad, please,” he sobbed. “It hurts so much.”

Rodrigo tied Mateo’s good wrist to the bedframe because the boy kept smashing the cast against the wall. He told himself he was preventing another injury. His hands shook while he tightened the leather strap.

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