A Soldier Left Seven Children Behind. His Young Wife Changed Everything-felicia

My name is Inés Roldán, and in San Jacinto, nobody expected anything from me except hunger.

That is not bitterness.

It is simply how poverty speaks when it has lived beside you long enough.

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At twenty-two, I owned two patched dresses, one pair of cracked shoes, and a debt at don Chucho’s store that grew faster than my courage.

Every morning before sunrise, I carried baskets of other people’s laundry to the river and knelt on the stones until my knees bruised purple.

The water was cold enough to make my fingers ache.

The lye burned the cracks in my skin.

By midday, my arms smelled of wet cotton, river mud, and smoke from the cooking fires along the bank.

My mother had died in winter.

My father had gone to Sonora to find work and had never returned.

For months, I told myself he was still alive because hunger is easier to face than abandonment.

Then I stopped telling myself anything.

Survival does not leave much room for poetry.

It counts coins.

It checks cupboards.

It decides which pain can be postponed until morning.

That was the life Gabriel Altamirano rode into.

He came to San Jacinto on a dark horse, his shoulders squared in an officer’s coat that had seen too much sun, too much dust, and too many fields where men did not come back whole.

The children trailed behind him.

Seven of them.

That was the first thing everyone saw.

Not the captain.

Not the horse.

Not the folded recruitment letter in his pocket.

The children.

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