“When did you last eat?” he asked.
She thought for a moment. “Yesterday, I think.”
Richard said nothing. He moved the plate closer.
He spread a wrapper on the floor for himself. He had already decided she would take the mattress. She picked up the fork, lowered it, picked it up again. Then, very quietly, as if the smallness of the room had made honesty easier, she began to speak.
“I buried my husband,” she said. “And my daughter. Five weeks ago.”
Richard didn’t move.
“They were going to a visa appointment. My daughter had just been accepted to study architecture abroad. She slept in her interview clothes because she was afraid of being late.” Her voice stayed precise, bare, almost calm. “A truck driver fell asleep at the wheel.”
The room went completely still.
“I keep driving at night,” she said. “Not every night. Just when the house gets too…” She searched for a word and failed. “I thought if I kept moving, maybe the feeling would…”
She stopped.
Richard waited.
“If I stop,” she said, almost whispering, “it becomes real.”
And there it was—the true thing under everything else.
If I stop, it becomes real.
Richard understood that more deeply than he could explain. Not her wealth, not her world, not the size of what she had lost—but that sentence. The fear that if you stood still even for a moment, pain would finally catch up and sit down beside you.
He did not say, “I’m sorry.” She had probably heard those words enough to fill the church where they buried her family.
So he said nothing.
And the silence between them became something warmer than pity. The silence of two people who recognized the shape of each other’s loneliness, even if they had arrived there by different roads.
She ate half the rice and drank the tea. He gave her an extra covering against the cold. She lay down fully dressed on his mattress. Richard switched off the bulb and lay on the floor.
Before sleep took him, he thought: she’ll be gone in the morning. She’ll go back to wherever she belongs. This is not my problem. I did what a decent person should do.
He did not know that across the city phones were ringing and security teams were tearing through the night. He did not know a GPS signal from a luxury car had gone still in a neighborhood nobody important ever entered. He did not know that more than a hundred people were looking for the woman asleep in his room.
He only slept.
At dawn he woke to a sound he had never heard on his street before—low, mechanical, organized. Not market noise. Not neighbors. Not children.
He opened his door.
The road outside was filled with cars.
Black, silver, enormous vehicles lined both sides of the broken tarmac. Men in dark clothes stood everywhere, alert and disciplined, speaking into earpieces. Above them, a helicopter circled.
Richard stood frozen in his doorway, still in his sleep clothes.
Leave a Comment