Alejandro’s guitar was the first thing I heard in the mornings and the last thing I heard before I went to bed.
Not always beautifully, not always smoothly, but always with that stubborn little rhythm that belonged only to him.
He was 13, which meant half child, half closed door, and the guitar was one of the few things that still let me hear what was going on inside him.

We had bought it for his birthday after months of quiet saving.
I had pretended it was no big thing, the way parents do when they have counted coins in their head for weeks and still smiled at the till.
He had opened the case at the kitchen table and gone completely silent.
That silence had been worth every penny.
From then on, the guitar lived on a black stand in his bedroom, positioned carefully between his desk and the window.
He wiped it down after playing.
He corrected anyone who called it a toy.
He carried it as if it were something breathing.
Some evenings, I would be washing up downstairs while the kettle clicked and the rain tapped at the back window, and his music would come through the ceiling in small, uneven bursts.
I used to complain, lightly, that he played the same bit too many times.
Secretly, I loved it.
It meant he was home.
It meant he was safe.
It meant the house still had a sound I understood.
So when I walked into his room one afternoon to collect the washing and saw only the stand, my whole body paused before my mind caught up.
The guitar was gone.
The stand was still there, angled towards the window as always, but the space it held was empty.
At first, I assumed he had moved it.
Children do that, I told myself.
They shift things around and forget to mention it.
I checked by the bed.
I checked under the desk.
I opened the wardrobe, even though there was no way it would fit without knocking coats and boxes everywhere.
I looked behind the laundry basket, in the narrow landing cupboard, and beside the pile of school shoes by the front door.
Nothing.
Only the strange quiet of a house missing its familiar noise.
By the time Alejandro came home, I had worked myself into the sort of calm that is not calm at all.
His blazer was damp from the walk back, and his hair was stuck slightly to his forehead.
He came in through the hallway with his bag dragging against one leg, gave me a quick glance, and tried to head straight upstairs.
“Sweetheart,” I said.
He stopped.
There was a tiny pause before he turned round.
That pause told me almost everything.
“Where’s your guitar?”
He looked at the floor.
Not at me.
Not towards his room.
At the worn strip of carpet near the stairs where everyone wiped their shoes badly and pretended they had not.
“I sold it, Mum.”
The words landed so plainly that for a second I thought I had misheard him.
“You did what?”
“I sold it.”
My first feeling was anger.
Not gentle disappointment.
Not confusion.
Anger.
That guitar had not been something we picked up casually.
It had been the result of saying no to little things, postponing repairs, choosing cheaper dinners, making the birthday stretch further than it should have.
He knew that.
He had seen it.
And now he stood there, apparently having made a decision worth hundreds of pounds without even telling me.
I opened my mouth.
Then he said, “It was for Elena.”
That stopped me.
I knew Elena’s name.
Alejandro had mentioned her before, usually in small bits, as children do when they are pretending not to care too much.
Elena liked science.
Elena had neat handwriting.
Elena sat near the window because it was easier for her chair.
I had seen her once at the school gate, wrapped in a navy coat, hands folded quietly in her lap while children moved noisily around her.
“What about Elena?” I asked.
Alejandro swallowed.
“Her wheelchair was falling apart.”
He said it with a seriousness that made him sound older than 13.
“One wheel kept sticking. She had to push really hard just to move between classrooms. The seat was splitting at the side. The metal bits were rusty. Everyone could see it.”
I stood there with one hand still on the banister.
The house suddenly felt very small.
“The other kids laughed,” he said.
His voice dipped on that word.
“Not all of them. But enough. They made jokes when she couldn’t get through the door quickly. They said things when the wheel got stuck.”
He rubbed the strap of his bag between finger and thumb until I thought he might tear it.
“I asked her why her parents didn’t get another one. She said they couldn’t.”
“And so you sold your guitar?”
He nodded.
“I didn’t know what else to do.”
A parent wants their child to be kind.
Then one day kindness appears in front of you wearing damp school trousers and having done something completely reckless, and you realise you are not as ready for it as you thought.
I wanted to tell him he should have come to me.
I wanted to tell him he had no right to sell a gift like that.
I wanted to tell him I was proud.
All three truths stood in my throat at once, fighting to get out.
“Did you do it properly?” I asked at last.
He nodded too quickly.
He dug into his pocket and pulled out a folded receipt, soft at the edges from being handled too much.
Then he showed me a message on his phone.
The screen was cracked slightly at one corner, and the message was short.
Thank you. I can’t believe it.
It was from Elena.
There was also a little appointment card from the mobility shop, tucked behind the receipt like proof he knew I would ask for.
He had not stolen money.
He had not lied to buy something for himself.
He had sold the thing he loved most so another child could move through school without being mocked.
That should have made everything simple.
It did not.
I put the receipt on the kitchen table and made tea because that is what I do when life becomes too large for a room.
The kettle boiled loudly.
Alejandro sat opposite me, hands tucked under his knees, looking smaller by the minute.
His mug sat untouched.
Mine went cold.
The receipt lay between us with the corners curling slightly.
“You should have told me,” I said.
“I know.”
“You should not have carried that on your own.”
“I know.”
“And you should not sell something that valuable without speaking to me first.”
“I know.”
There was no defence in his voice.
That made it harder.
Anger is easier when someone argues back.
When they simply sit there, ashamed and good and foolish, it has nowhere clean to go.
Eventually, I reached across the table and put my hand over his.
His fingers were cold.
“I am upset,” I said.
He flinched.
“But I am also proud of you.”
His eyes filled at once, though he tried to blink it away.
I let him keep the dignity of pretending he had not cried.
That night, the house felt wrong without the guitar.
No scales.
No repeated chorus.
No muffled mistake followed by a frustrated sigh.
Just the hum of the fridge, the occasional car passing outside, and Alejandro moving quietly about his room like someone trying not to disturb his own guilt.
I lay awake longer than I should have.
I thought about Elena.
I thought about her parents, whoever they were, hearing that another child had done what they could not afford to do.
I thought about the children who laughed.
Then I thought about the guitar stand upstairs, empty and accusing.
In the morning, rain made the windows look blurred.
The hallway smelled faintly of damp coats and toast.
My mother, who had been staying with us that week, was in the sitting room with a blanket over her knees, pretending not to listen to everything as usual.
Alejandro came downstairs in his school uniform, quieter than normal.
He had dark shadows under his eyes.
I wanted to ask if he was all right, but the question felt too small.
Instead, I straightened his collar.
He let me.
That alone told me he was not all right.
The kettle had just clicked off when the knock came.
It was not the soft double tap of a neighbour.
It was not the hurried thump of a delivery driver leaving a parcel and running back to the van.
It was hard, official, and certain.
The kind of knock that makes the whole house hold its breath.
I wiped my hands on a tea towel and went to the front door.
When I opened it, two police officers were standing on the step.
Rain shone on their jackets.
One of them had a folder tucked under his arm.
The other looked past me into the hallway before quickly looking back at my face.
“Are you Alejandro’s mother?”
For one stupid second, I wondered whether there had been an accident on the way to school.
Then I remembered he was still upstairs.
“Yes,” I said.
My voice did not sound like mine.
Behind me, a door opened.
Alejandro stepped out of his room and came to the top of the stairs.
He saw the uniforms.
All the colour went from his face.
He did not ask what was happening.
He did not say he had done nothing wrong.
He just froze.
The officer noticed.
His expression shifted, not harshly, but carefully.
“Ma’am,” he said, “we need you and your son to come outside.”
Outside.
Not into the sitting room.
Not a quiet word in the hallway.
Outside, where the neighbours could see and the rain could blow into the house.
My stomach turned.
“What has happened?” I asked.
The officer did not answer immediately.
That was the worst part.
Silence gives fear room to invent things.
I reached back for Alejandro without looking, and he came down the stairs slowly, one step at a time.
His hand slipped into mine when he reached the bottom.
It was ice-cold.
“What did my son do?” I asked.
The words came out sharper than I meant them to.
The officer looked from me to Alejandro.
Then he said, “Ma’am, don’t you know what your son has done? You need to hear the truth.”
My mother appeared behind us in the hallway.
She had one hand pressed to the wall.
“What truth?” she whispered.
No one answered her.
We stepped onto the front path.
Rain dotted Alejandro’s blazer almost at once.
Across the road, a neighbour paused beside her bin, pretending to adjust the lid while watching everything.
A car slowed slightly as it passed.
The ordinary street had turned into a stage, and my son was standing in the middle of it with his head bowed.
The officer opened his folder.
I braced myself for something terrible.
A statement.
An accusation.
A theft.
A mistake at the shop.
Instead, he took out a photograph.
He held it carefully, shielding it from the rain.
I saw Elena first.
She was sitting outside the school entrance in a wheelchair that looked clean and sturdy and new.
Her hands were over her mouth.
Her eyes were wet.
A few children stood around her, caught in that awkward stillness children fall into when something real interrupts their noise.
Then I saw Alejandro.
He was slightly behind her, holding a small envelope, his shoulders hunched as if he wished he could disappear.
I looked at my son.
He would not look back.
“The shop owner contacted us,” the officer said.
My heart jolted again.
“He reviewed the sale after realising a young boy had sold an expensive guitar and used the money immediately towards a wheelchair order. He was concerned at first.”
“At first?” I repeated.
The officer nodded.
“Then Elena’s mother came in.”
I did not know Elena’s mother.
I had only imagined her, vaguely and uselessly, as someone somewhere having a difficult time.
Now she became real in my mind.
A woman standing in a shop with forms to sign, trying not to cry in front of strangers.
“She confirmed what had happened,” the officer said.
Alejandro made a tiny sound beside me.
It was not fear.
It was embarrassment so deep it hurt to hear.
“I didn’t want anyone to know,” he whispered.
The officer’s face softened.
“I gathered that.”
My mother moved closer to the doorframe.
Her slippers were on the wet threshold, and she did not seem to notice.
The second officer reached into the folder then.
“There is more,” he said.
I looked at him, suddenly afraid all over again.
Kindness can have consequences too.
Sometimes the world punishes a good heart simply because it does not know where to put it.
“What more?” I asked.
He brought out the receipt Alejandro had shown me the night before, or a copy of it.
Beside it was another paper, folded into thirds.
No letterhead I recognised.
No dramatic stamp.
Just paper, ordinary and devastating in the way paper often is.
The first officer looked at Alejandro.
“Do you want to tell her, or shall I?”
My son shut his eyes.
That frightened me more than anything.
Because until that moment, I had believed I knew the shape of the story.
He had sold the guitar.
He had bought the wheelchair.
The police had come because adults had noticed.
But now there was another page in the folder, and Alejandro was acting as if it carried something heavier than all the rest.
My mother whispered his name.
“Alejandro?”
He opened his eyes.
They were bright with tears he was still refusing to let fall.
“I’m sorry,” he said.
I gripped his hand.
“For what?”
He looked at the officer, then at the folded paper.
The officer turned it slightly so I could see the top edge.
There was a handwritten note clipped to it.
The writing was uneven, as if someone had been crying or shaking while they wrote.
My mother saw it too.
Her breath caught.
She reached for the wall but missed, and I heard the dull sound of her sitting down hard on the bottom stair behind us.
“Mum,” I said, half turning.
“I’m fine,” she said at once, which in our family always meant the opposite.
No one moved for a second.
The neighbour across the road had stopped pretending now.
The rain kept falling.
The officer waited until I looked back at him.
Then he said, quietly, “Your son did not just buy Elena a wheelchair.”
Alejandro’s hand trembled in mine.
The folded paper shook slightly in the officer’s fingers.
I suddenly remembered the empty guitar stand upstairs.
I remembered the untouched tea.
I remembered how quickly Alejandro had nodded when I asked whether he had done it properly.
Too quickly.
The officer unfolded the page.
Whatever was written there changed his face as he read the first line again, as though even he had not managed to harden himself against it.
Then he looked at me.
And I understood, with a coldness spreading through my chest, that the truth had not yet begun.