I am 65 years old.
And after 37 years of marriage, I was abandoned by the man with whom I shared almost my entire life.

On the day of the divorce, my ex-husband,  Don Rafael , handed me a bank card.
He said in a calm voice:

—Here’s  3,000 pesos . That’ll be enough to survive for a few months.

He said it as if those 37 years together were worth only that much.
As if I were an old object that was no longer useful.

I saw him turn around and leave the family court in  Guadalajara , without looking back.
I felt a lump in my throat so strong I could barely breathe.

I kept the card.
Not because I needed it…
but because it was like a thorn in my heart.

After the divorce, I lived in a small, damp room on the outskirts of the city.
I survived by doing whatever I could: cleaning houses, watching cars, collecting bottles in the street.

Those were the darkest years of my life.

I went hungry many times.
I went to bed with an empty stomach many nights.

But  I never  touched those 3,000 pesos.

Not because she was proud…
but because she didn’t want to touch something that felt like charity.

I hated that card.
I hated being abandoned.
I hated feeling that, after a lifetime, I was just a burden.

 

Time passed slowly, like a dull knife, cutting slowly but deeply.

My body aged rapidly.
There were days when getting out of bed was a battle.

My children would visit occasionally and leave me some money, but they had their own families.
I never told them about my pain or my dizziness.
I didn’t want to be another worry.

Until one day…
I fainted in front of the door of the room where I lived.

The doctor was clear:

—Severe malnutrition. Requires treatment. Hospitalization.

I knew I had no choice.

For the first time in five years, I thought about that card.

“He only has 3,000 pesos… but at least it will help me for a few days.”

The next morning I went to the bank.

My hands were trembling when I handed the card to the young cashier.

—I want to withdraw everything, please.

In my mind I could already see myself leaving with a few bills, returning to my miserable life.

But the girl stared at the screen…
for too long.

Then he looked at me.
His eyes were full of surprise.

—Ma’am… —she swallowed— the balance is not 3,000 pesos.

My heart skipped a beat.

—So… how much is there?

She printed the statement and slid it toward me.

I looked at the paper.

And I felt like the world stopped.

$983,000 pesos.
Almost  a million .

I ran out of breath.
I thought I was reading it wrong.

I looked again.

The number did not change.

“Who… who deposited this money?” I asked, my voice trembling.

The cashier turned the screen towards me.

There was one name I knew all too well.

RAFAEL.

Monthly transfers.
For five years.
Without missing a single time.

I returned home in silence.

I didn’t sleep that night.

I just stared at the ceiling, crying.

I remembered his sad gaze.
His strange silences.
The nights he stayed awake thinking I was asleep.

What if… he hadn’t left me because he didn’t love me?

I needed answers.

The next day I traveled to the town where her older sister,  Doña Teresa , lived in  Michoacán .

The house was small, next to the cornfields.

“Teresa… are you there?” I called, my voice breaking.

She came out and, when she saw me, her eyes filled with tears.

—Maria… you’ve already come.

Where is Rafael? I need to talk to him.

Doña Teresa remained silent.

He went into the house and came back with a small wooden box.

His hands were trembling.

—Maria… Rafael passed away.

I felt like my heart was being ripped out.

—No… it can’t be… only five years have passed…

She cried.

—I had terminal cancer… since before the divorce.

The world collapsed.

“He didn’t want you to take care of him,” she continued. “He didn’t want you to spend your last years watching the man you love die.
That’s why he left.
That’s why he set you free.”

He handed me the box.

—This is for you. He said to only give it to you if you came to get it.

Inside there was a letter.

Her handwriting.

Maria,
when you read this, I won’t be here anymore.
Forgive me for leaving in the cruellest way.
It hurt me more than you can imagine.
I didn’t want you to take care of me while I faded away.
I wanted you to live without chains, without tears.
Money is so you’ll never lack anything.
Eat well. Live well.
I don’t need your forgiveness.
I just want you to be happy.
If there’s another life… I would choose you again.

I fell to my knees.

I cried like a baby.

For five years I lived hating him…
while he fought against death,
sending me money month after month,
until his hands could no longer do it.

I thought he abandoned me.

But the truth was different:

He loved me so much… that he chose to leave alone.

Standing before her photograph on the family altar, I touched the frame with trembling fingers.

—Why didn’t you tell me…?

But he could no longer answer.

That day, when I held the card with 3,000 pesos, I thought I was an abandoned woman.

Five years later, faced with his memory, I understood the truth:

I was never alone.
I was loved… until the very end.