“OPEN MY BELLY, DAD, I’M BEGGING YOU! There’s something alive inside me!”
The scream came before dawn, sharp enough to make the whole house seem to hold its breath.
Rodrigo reached the bedroom with his phone in one hand and the awful feeling that he had already failed before he opened the door.

The landing was dim, the narrow hallway smelling faintly of polish, damp coats and the washing that had been left too long in the basket.
Inside the bedroom, Emiliano was on the floor.
He was curled tight around his stomach, his knees dragged up, his pyjama shirt bunched in both fists.
The mug of hot chocolate sat on the bedside table beside the antiseptic wipes Rodrigo had started keeping there after the second hospital visit.
It was still warm.
Steam rose in thin, pale lines, catching the weak grey light at the window.
“Dad,” Emiliano gasped. “Please. It is moving.”
Rodrigo’s first instinct was to drop beside him, pull him close, promise anything.
His second instinct was the one that had been trained into him by three exhausting trips to hospital, by tired consultants, by discharge papers, by phrases that sounded calm because they were printed in black ink.
No obstruction.
No rupture.
No urgent abnormality.
Monitor symptoms.
Return if condition worsens.
The condition always worsened.
It worsened when the house became quiet.
It worsened after the bedtime drink.
It worsened when Daniela carried the mug upstairs herself, smiling with that careful gentleness that made Rodrigo feel guilty for ever doubting her.
“Please,” Emiliano whispered, digging his nails into his stomach. “Open it. Take it out.”
“Stop,” Rodrigo said.
The word came out harsher than he intended.
Emiliano flinched as if he had been slapped.
Rodrigo heard it himself, the hard edge of exhaustion, and still he could not pull it back.
“We have done this,” he said. “Three times. Three hospital visits, Emiliano. They have checked everything they can check.”
His son lifted his head from the carpet.
Sweat had made his hair stick flat to his forehead.
His mouth was dry and pale.
His eyes were not the eyes of a child performing for attention.
They were the eyes of someone trapped in a nightmare while everyone around him discussed manners.
“It was her,” he said.
Rodrigo did not need to ask who.
Daniela was already in the doorway.
She had come silently, wrapped in a white robe, her hair smooth, her face arranged into a sorrow so delicate it almost looked kind.
Almost.
“Again,” she said softly.
It was a small word, but it carried a whole accusation.
Rodrigo turned towards her and saw the hurt she wanted him to see.
Her hand rose to her chest.
Her eyes filled, but not too much.
A controlled sadness.
A useful sadness.
“Rodrigo,” she said, “my love, he cannot keep doing this. He cannot keep blaming me because I live here now.”
“She put something in it,” Emiliano cried.
His hand shook as he pointed towards the mug.
“The chocolate. She put something in my chocolate.”
Daniela closed her eyes as though receiving a wound.
The performance was beautiful, and that was the worst of it.
“Do you hear him?” she asked. “I make him a drink. I try to care for him. And now I am poison.”
Rodrigo looked back at the cup.
White porcelain.
Brown ring at the rim.
A little trail where the drink had slopped against the side.
It looked ordinary.
So many terrible things do.
“He is grieving,” Daniela continued. “He is angry. He does not want a new family. But this is becoming dangerous.”
The word dangerous made Rodrigo’s jaw tighten.
Not because he disagreed.
Because part of him feared she was right.
Since Daniela had moved in, Emiliano had changed until the boy who used to leave muddy shoes by the back door and laugh with biscuit crumbs on his mouth had become a stranger in his own home.
He stopped sitting with them at supper.
He said he was not hungry, then Rodrigo found toast hidden in tissues in the bin.
He locked his bedroom door.
He watched Daniela’s hands.
He froze when she touched his shoulder.
He went quiet whenever she put a mug on the table.
Rodrigo had tried patience first.
Then firmness.
Then doctors.
Doctors gave him words that sounded clean enough to hold.
Anxiety.
Adjustment.
Stress response.
Rejection of a step-parent.
Those words had weight because they came from people in lanyards, behind desks, under bright lights.
They sounded sensible.
They sounded adult.
They sounded like permission to stop listening to the child on the floor.
The electric kettle clicked off somewhere below them.
The little domestic sound moved through the house like an insult.
“Dad,” Emiliano whispered.
Rodrigo rubbed both hands over his face.
He had not slept properly in weeks.
He had sat in hospital corridors with vending-machine tea going cold in paper cups.
He had answered the same questions again and again while Emiliano curled on plastic chairs under fluorescent lights.
He had watched Daniela dab at her eyes and tell nurses that she was trying, she really was, but the boy simply hated her.
And every time they came home with papers and no answer.
Papers were easy to trust.
A child’s terror asked for something more expensive.
It asked for courage.
“If you accuse Daniela again without proof,” Rodrigo said, “I will sign the clinic papers tomorrow.”
Silence landed at once.
Not ordinary silence.
Not the pause after an argument.
A deeper thing.
Emiliano stopped crying.
His body still trembled, but the sound vanished.
He stared at his father with an expression Rodrigo would remember for the rest of his life, though he did not know it yet.
It was not anger.
It was not even shock.
It was a child understanding that the person meant to open the door had chosen to stand outside it.
Daniela put a hand on Rodrigo’s arm.
“Thank you,” she whispered.
That was when Lucía moved.
She had been on the landing, half hidden near the banister, still in her cardigan, hair tied back carelessly because the morning had begun before anyone was ready for it.
She was new.
Barely two weeks in the house.
New enough to be spoken to politely when Rodrigo was in the room, and sharply when he was not.
New enough to understand that homes like this had rules no one printed.
Do not stare.
Do not ask.
Do not repeat what you hear.
Do not make the family uncomfortable.
Keep your job.
She had tried to live by those rules.
For five days, she told herself she was imagining things.
For seven, she told herself it was not her place.
By the tenth, the thought of silence had begun to feel like complicity.
She had seen Daniela in the kitchen at night.
Not once.
Not by accident.
The first time, Lucía had been putting away the washing-up bowl and wiping a splash from the worktop.
Daniela had stood near the cupboard where the cinnamon was kept.
A small dark bottle rested in her palm.
It had no pharmacy label.
No proper instruction.
Only a torn strip of paper around the glass and a stained lid.
When Daniela noticed Lucía, she smiled.
“Couldn’t sleep,” she said.
Lucía nodded and pretended not to have seen the bottle disappear behind the jars.
In Britain, people often mistake politeness for peace.
It is not peace.
Sometimes it is just fear wearing clean shoes.
The second time, Lucía took a photograph.
Her hands were shaking so badly she almost dropped the phone into the drawer with the tea towels.
The image was blurred at the edge, but the bottle was clear enough.
Small.
Dark.
Hidden behind cinnamon.
The third time, she saw the drops.
It was 11:42 at night.
She knew because the clock above the kitchen door had a little crack through the glass, and her phone lit up as she lifted it.
The kitchen was dim except for the light beneath the cupboard.
A mug waited on the counter.
A ceramic spoon lay beside it.
Daniela opened the bottle.
One drop fell.
Then another.
Then a third.
The liquid vanished into the hot chocolate almost instantly.
Daniela stirred until the surface became smooth and harmless.
Then she carried it upstairs.
Lucía had stood in the kitchen with the tea towel in her hand, her heart hammering so loudly she thought Daniela might hear it from the landing.
She should have spoken then.
She knew that.
But fear is practical.
It counts rent.
It counts references.
It counts every door that might shut when a powerful person says you are trouble.
So she waited.
And now Emiliano was on the carpet, begging his father to cut him open.
Lucía stepped into the doorway.
“Mr Rodrigo,” she said.
Her voice was quiet, but it travelled through the room.
Daniela turned first.
The look she gave Lucía was not sad at all.
It was sharp and private.
A warning delivered in the space of a second.
Lucía kept her eyes on Rodrigo.
“Please do not let him drink anything else prepared by your wife.”
Rodrigo frowned as if the sentence had arrived in a language he did not understand.
“What?”
Daniela laughed once.
A tiny sound.
Too tidy.
“Excuse me?”
Lucía’s mouth had gone dry.
She could feel every class line in the house at once.
The employer.
The wife.
The child.
The worker.
The quiet corridor with the housekeeper watching from the side and a security man pretending not to listen.
Still, she did not step back.
“I saw what she put in the chocolate,” she said.
There it was.
No softening.
No apology.
No way to fold it away and pretend it had been misheard.
The house seemed to tilt.
The housekeeper froze on the landing with a tea towel clutched to her chest.
The security man looked at the floor.
Rodrigo’s face lost colour slowly, as though the blood had been called elsewhere.
Daniela stared at Lucía for half a second too long.
Then she recovered.
“That is a disgusting thing to say,” she whispered.
It might have worked on another morning.
It might have worked if Emiliano had not looked exactly as he did.
Small.
Sweating.
Broken open by fear.
But the mask had slipped before the words arrived, and Rodrigo had seen the gap.
“What did you see?” he asked.
Daniela stepped in quickly.
“Rodrigo, no. You cannot seriously be listening to staff gossip while your son is in crisis.”
Staff gossip.
The phrase landed with a clean little slap.
Lucía felt it, but she had no room left for shame.
She pointed to the mug.
“Look at the bottom before anyone touches it.”
Daniela moved towards the bedside table.
So did Rodrigo.
For one awful second, they reached at the same time.
Then Rodrigo got there first.
He picked up the cup by the handle.
It was still warm against his fingers.
The smell was sweet.
Chocolate, milk, something faintly spiced.
Ordinary enough to make him want to doubt everything again.
Daniela stood beside him, breathing carefully.
“Put it down,” she said. “You are frightening him.”
From the floor, Emiliano lifted one trembling hand.
“I told you,” he whispered. “Dad, I told you.”
That did something to Rodrigo that no doctor had managed to do.
It broke through the paper.
It broke through the polite explanations, the expert phrases, the exhausted anger.
It made him look properly.
He held the mug beneath the bedroom light.
At first, there was only brown liquid.
A skin of cocoa.
A pale ring at the rim.
A small smear where Emiliano must have drunk before the pain began.
Lucía moved closer.
“Do not shake it,” she said.
Rodrigo stopped.
Even Daniela stopped.
The chocolate settled.
Tiny ripples faded.
At the bottom of the white porcelain, something dark gathered in a place where no powder should have gathered.
It was thin at first, almost like a thread.
Then it curled.
Rodrigo’s hand jolted.
A drop of chocolate spilled onto the bedside table and spread into the corner of a folded hospital form.
The housekeeper gasped from the landing.
The security man muttered something under his breath.
Daniela’s face changed.
Only for a second.
Only enough for Rodrigo to see that she was not surprised.
That was worse than panic.
Surprise would have meant innocence.
This was recognition.
“What is that?” Rodrigo asked.
His voice sounded nothing like his own.
No one answered.
The thing at the bottom shifted again, pressed against the porcelain, then disappeared under the brown surface.
Emiliano began to cry without sound.
Lucía pulled her phone from her cardigan pocket.
“I have a photograph,” she said. “Of the bottle.”
Daniela looked at her then with a hatred so bare it stripped the room of every polite lie it had been carrying.
“You stupid girl,” she said.
There was no softness now.
No wounded wife.
No careful sorrow.
Only the person underneath.
Rodrigo turned the mug away from her.
“Where is the bottle?”
Daniela smiled.
It was small.
It was not kind.
“You have spent weeks calling your own son mad,” she said. “Do you think one nanny and one dirty cup will make you clean again?”
The words struck Rodrigo harder than any denial could have.
Because some part of them was true.
He looked down at Emiliano, who was still reaching towards him from the carpet.
Rodrigo knelt at once.
The mug stayed in his left hand, held out from his body like something dangerous.
With his right, he gathered his son against his chest.
Emiliano clung to him.
Not with relief.
Not yet.
With the desperate grip of a child who has not decided whether rescue has arrived too late.
“I’m sorry,” Rodrigo whispered.
The words were too small.
Of course they were.
Some apologies are not repairs.
They are only the first honest sound after a long cowardice.
Lucía unlocked her phone.
The cracked screen lit her face from below.
“There is more,” she said.
Daniela lunged.
Rodrigo twisted away with the mug, and the security man finally stepped into the room, blocking her by instinct rather than instruction.
The movement knocked the bedside table.
The hospital papers slid to the floor.
The mug did not fall.
But a thin line of chocolate ran down Rodrigo’s hand, warm and sticky, and he felt something in it move against his skin.
He did not shout.
That was the strangest part.
He simply went very still.
Lucía’s thumb hovered over the screen.
The first photograph appeared.
The bottle behind the cinnamon.
The torn strip of paper.
The stained lid.
The housekeeper made a faint choking sound and sank against the doorframe, one hand pressed to her mouth.
Daniela looked at the photograph, and for the first time her breathing changed.
Not much.
Enough.
Rodrigo saw it.
Emiliano saw it.
Lucía saw it.
The whole house saw it.
Then Lucía swiped to the next image.
“This is the one I did not understand,” she said.
The picture showed the kitchen counter at 11:42.
The cupboard light was on.
The spoon was beside the mug.
Daniela’s hand was in frame, blurred but recognisable.
And beside Emiliano’s cup was another cup.
A second one.
Full.
Waiting.
Rodrigo stared at it.
His son was still shaking in his arms.
The room had become so quiet that the faint hum of the bedside lamp seemed enormous.
Daniela looked towards the doorway, towards the stairs, towards any exit left to her.
Lucía swallowed hard.
“That second cup,” she said, “was not for Emiliano.”
Rodrigo looked from the photograph to his wife.
Daniela’s smile returned in fragments, broken at the corners but still trying to hold.
Downstairs, in the kitchen, the kettle clicked on again though nobody had touched it.
And from behind the cinnamon jars, something small and glassy rolled softly against the cupboard door.