Grandma Said the Pills Made Sofía Behave. Then the Doctor Saw the Bottle-eirian

My daughter used to laugh before she spoke.

That was how Sofía entered any room, with a burst of sound ahead of her body, socks sliding on tile, rag doll tucked beneath one arm, cheeks pink from whatever tiny adventure she had invented in the hallway.

In our apartment in Guadalajara, she made ordinary things feel alive.

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She sang to the bathwater, gave names to spoons, and made her rag doll ask me whether zucchini had feelings before I cut it for dinner.

She was four years old, which meant she was exhausting in the way healthy children are exhausting.

She was loud, curious, stubborn, tender, and completely incapable of walking anywhere when running was available.

Ricardo used to smile at her energy when we were alone.

He would lift her onto his shoulders, call her “mi vida,” and tell me she had my eyes and his temper.

But when his mother was around, that softness in him changed.

Doña Elena had a way of entering a room and making everyone adjust themselves.

She did not yell often.

She did not need to.

She corrected with a look, sighed like a martyr, and made every preference sound like a moral law.

Before she came to stay with us, I had known her for years as the woman who inspected my floors with her eyes and told Ricardo I was “still learning” how to keep a home.

I had tried to be patient because marriage teaches women to translate disrespect into compromise.

I let her comments pass.

I let her decide what kind of soup was proper for a sick child.

I let her hold Sofía’s hand during family gatherings because I wanted my daughter to have a grandmother, not a war.

That was the trust signal I gave her.

Access.

A spare key, an open door, afternoons alone while I cooked or worked, the assumption that anyone who loved Ricardo would never harm his child.

When Doña Elena arrived with one small suitcase and a story about her injured knee, I knew before she sat down that I was expected to welcome her.

She leaned into the doorway with her cane, inhaled sharply, and said walking had become difficult.

“Just a few days,” she told Ricardo.

Ricardo did not ask me.

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