
I cared for my paralyzed wife for five years. One afternoon, I forgot my wallet and went back home. When I opened the door… I froze.
What I saw struck me with brutal force, as if the air had suddenly vanished. Everything I had protected, sustained, and revered for so long crumbled in an instant.
My name is Iñaki Salgado, a man in his early thirties, thin to the point of seeming fragile, with deep dark circles under his eyes and a tired gaze that he learned to endure in silence.
My life used to be simple with my wife, Ximena Arriola, in a small adobe house on the outskirts of Puebla, where the air smelled of bougainvillea and freshly baked bread at dawn.
We were elementary school teachers. We didn’t have luxuries, but we did have something more valuable: respect, calm, and an honest way of loving each other.
Everything changed one December, shortly before Christmas.
Ximena went to the market to buy ingredients for tamales. A truck with failed brakes hit her on a corner wet from the drizzle. When I received the call from the hospital, I was teaching. I remember dropping the chalk to the floor before running out.
When I saw her on the stretcher, I didn’t recognize her.
The woman who always walked briskly, who laughed with the children, and who sang while she cooked… lay motionless, her eyes filled with fear.
Severe spinal injury. Half-body paralysis.
From that day on, my world shrank to one room.
I took an indefinite leave of absence from school. Every spoonful of soup, every change of sheets, every clumsy massage on her numb legs… I did it all.
Our house became a makeshift clinic: medications, bandages, rehabilitation equipment, and that constant smell of alcohol and hopelessness.
Some family members suggested I take her to a specialized center. I always gave the same answer:
—She’s my wife. I take care of her.
To survive, I did electrical work for hire. I would come home exhausted, but every night I would sit beside him and read him passages from old books. Sometimes I would talk to him about my students, the jacaranda trees in bloom, anything that would remind him that life went on.
Ximena hardly spoke.
She nodded. She cried silently. I believed it was pain… and pent-up love. I never doubted it.
Years passed. The visits dwindled. Some told me, bluntly, to let go, to think of myself. I didn’t judge them. Caring for someone like that is a long and lonely road.
Until that afternoon.

I was on my way to work when I remembered I’d forgotten my wallet: documents, money, everything. I went back home thinking I’d be in and out in seconds.
I opened the door.
The light of the setting sun came in through the broken window and revealed the truth like an open wound.
Ximena was not in bed.
I was standing.
Company. To you.
And she wasn’t alone.
Beside her stood an unknown man, hurriedly folding clothes and stuffing them into a large suitcase on the bed. They were laughing softly.
A laugh I hadn’t heard in five years. A laugh that cut me to the core.
“Hurry,” she said in a clear, strong voice. “Before he comes back. Grab all the money he keeps in the wardrobe. We’re going south and starting over.”
I dropped my keys on the floor.
The metallic sound alerted them.
Ximena paled. In her hands trembled a wad of bills: the money from my sleepless nights, my work, the medicines she never needed.
I didn’t scream.
I didn’t hit anything.
I just felt something inside me shut down.
“Since when?” I asked in a whisper.
Two years.
Two years of walking. Two years of pretending.
The man was a former lover. They had reconnected. She pretended to be paralyzed to get a free caregiver, a house, money… while he “stabilized.”
—Iñaki… let me explain… —he said, approaching.
I took a step back.
Five years of my life had been a play.
And I, the most naive spectator.
I went to the wardrobe, took my wallet and put it in my pocket.
“Go,” I said calmly. “Keep the money. Consider it payment for a flawless performance.”
They fled like thieves caught in the act.
The house fell silent.
I sat down in the wooden chair.
It hurt. A lot.
But I also felt something unexpected: lightness.
That night I opened all the windows. I let the Puebla air carry away the smell of medicine, of lies, of the past.
I swept. I cleaned. I breathed.
The next day he would return to school.
He would still be Iñaki Salgado: a tired man, yes… but free.
The door to my old life slammed shut.
Behind it, however, a new path began—one where I would no longer carry the weight of a lie disguised as love.
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