On My 63rd Birthday, My Son Whispered The Cruellest Wish-Teptep

On my 63rd birthday, my son whispered in front of the cake: “I hope this is the last candle you ever blow out.”

I blew out the flame, looked him dead in the eye, and replied: “My wish has already come true… tomorrow you will understand.”

Nobody stopped applauding.

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Nobody saw how the last bit of my patience died.

And before dawn, I had already opened the safe.

My name is Ernest Salazar.

I am 63 years old.

The house where my family sat that evening, smiling over cake and helping themselves as though they were honoured guests, was not built from luck.

It was not built from easy money, or from anyone else’s generosity.

It was built from thirty years of garage work, from oil under my nails, from winters when my knees ached so badly I had to grip the counter before standing, and from mornings when I unlocked the shutters before the sky had properly turned blue.

Teresa, my wife, used to say the place smelled of metal, rain and stubbornness.

She said that as if it were praise.

Maybe it was.

Teresa died eight years ago.

Cancer took her voice first, then her strength, then finally the soft warmth that had filled every corner of our home.

After she was gone, the house did not become empty all at once.

It emptied in layers.

Her coat stayed on the hook for months because I could not bring myself to move it.

Her mug stayed at the back of the cupboard, the one with a tiny chip near the handle.

Her chair remained slightly angled towards mine, as if she might return to correct me for reading the paper at breakfast instead of talking.

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