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The rain started before sunrise, hammering against the glass as if it wanted to force its way inside and expose what had long been hidden.
In the mansion on Presidente Masaryk Avenue in Polanco, the silence gleamed like polished marble—refined, costly, and dangerous. It was the kind of silence that buried arguments under Persian rugs and tucked secrets behind imported drapes.
Leticia was forty-three, with hands shaped by years of labor and a fatigue that went deeper than muscle. She had been working since she was fifteen—first in modest homes scented with beans and damp laundry, later in lavish houses that smelled of luxury perfume and antiseptic. Everywhere, her role was identical: clean, organize, vanish.
She had served in this mansion for four years. She knew which stair creaked before the landing, which faucet dripped before dawn, and how morning sunlight traced golden lines across the floor, as if even the sun worked to maintain perfection.
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