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The traffic light ahead glowed red. The driver slowed to a stop.
Diego barely noticed.
On the flooded sidewalk, a barefoot girl pushed forward against the rain. She couldn’t have been more than fifteen. Her dress was too thin for the weather, clinging to her knees, darkened by water. Her hair—long, black, heavy with rain—stuck to her cheeks and neck. She bent her body slightly, shielding a woven basket pressed to her chest, covered by a white cloth already soaked through.
She walked as if stopping wasn’t an option.
“Stop,” Diego said suddenly.
The driver glanced at him through the mirror.
“Sir… it’s raining heavily.”
The SUV eased toward the curb.
Before the driver could open his door, Diego was already stepping out into the downpour. Rain hit him like a wall—cold, heavy, immediate. His tailored jacket darkened in seconds, water slipping down his collar, soaking his shirt. He felt none of it.
She noticed him and stopped. Her shoulders stiffened. Those eyes—large, brown, alert—looked up at him with the instinctive caution of someone who had learned early that the world doesn’t always offer kindness for free.
“Are you selling bread?” Diego asked quietly.
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