The Portrait Was Supposed To Erase Her — Until The House Papers Came Out-thuyhien

The flash faded, but nobody moved.

For one second, the living room looked exactly like a photograph: Carmen’s hand suspended in the air, Andrés staring at the rug, Ramiro’s thumb frozen against his wedding band, Clara still turned toward the window, and me standing beside the fireplace with Emiliano asleep against my chest.

Then the camera clicked again.

Image

The photographer lowered it slowly. His face had gone pale, not with fear exactly, but with the awkward knowledge that he had just captured something no family album could hide.

Carmen’s cheeks tightened.

“Delete that,” she said.

The photographer blinked. “Ma’am?”

“I said delete it.” Her voice stayed smooth. That was always her trick. She could insult someone, strip them from a room, reach for a newborn, and still sound like she was ordering tea.

I shifted Emiliano higher on my shoulder. His cheek pressed warm against my collarbone. My scar pulled so sharply I had to plant one hand against the mantel to stay upright.

“No,” I said.

Carmen turned her head toward me as if I had used the wrong fork at dinner.

“You are embarrassing yourself.”

At 2:43 p.m., I almost laughed.

Not because anything was funny.

Because for seven years I had been careful around that woman. Careful with my tone. Careful with holidays. Careful with where I sat, what I cooked, how long I held Andrés’ hand, how quickly I answered her texts. I had made myself smaller so Andrés would not have to choose.

And he still hadn’t.

The room smelled of lilies turning heavy in the afternoon heat. Coffee had gone bitter in the cups. The pan dulce on the tray had a sugary crust that caught the light. Somewhere upstairs, the baby monitor hummed faintly from the nursery I had painted at eight months pregnant because Andrés said he had “too many meetings.”

Carmen stepped closer.

“Give me my grandson.”

The word my landed harder than grandson.

I looked down at Emiliano. He slept with his mouth slightly open, one tiny hand folded against the sky-blue blanket. He did not know who owned the house. He did not know what bloodline Carmen worshipped. He only knew my heartbeat.

I looked at the photographer.

“Please save every photo you took today.”

Carmen snapped, “She is not the client.”

The photographer looked from her to me.

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