
- Lolade Alaka

- 6 days ago
- 19 min read
At dawn, Saoirse’s feet were numb.
She pressed her palm to the glass of the window she found herself standing before, watching the sun climb. The warmth against her skin almost felt like touch. And for the briefest moment, she imagined what it would be like if he came home now, just walked in unannounced, as he used to before the silence grew between them.
But the house stayed still, obedient, and the only breath she heard was her own.
Sunlight soon edged across the curtains, catching the corners of gilt frames, the roses on the nightstand now brittle at their tips. The hum of the house resumed with distant footsteps, water running somewhere, the faint clatter of breakfast trays, for whom, Saoirse didn’t know.
Her head ached, and when she entered the nursery again, the air was cool, too cool. The twins were already fed, their tiny forms wrapped in matching linen. Lisa looked up from arranging bottles. “You were awake again last night, Señora?”
Saoirse paused. “Yes.”
Lisa hesitated, fiddling with a sterilized cap. “Marta said she thought she heard you in the hall around three.” Her tone was careful, deferential, but it made Saoirse’s skin prickle.
She smiled faintly. “I couldn’t sleep. I was just checking on them.”
Lisa nodded, but her eyes flicked briefly toward the window. “Marco was on patrol then.”
Saoirse’s fingers tightened around the crib rail. “Did he… say something?”
“No, señora,” she said quickly, looking down. “Of course not. He wouldn’t.”
But the seed was planted now, the image of Marco somewhere in the dark, maybe seeing her wandering barefoot through the corridor, maybe thinking her strange or pitiful.
Saoirse looked down at the twins, both sleeping again, the fragile peace of their faces like a mercy she didn’t deserve. She smoothed David’s hair, then Mariana’s, and told herself she didn’t care what anyone saw. But she did.
+
The staff always knew everything before she did.
There were voices in the hall by midday, the sound of heels against marble. When Marta appeared at Saoirse’s door, her expression was that careful blend of reverence and forewarning. “Señora,” she murmured. “Doña Bibiana has arrived.”
Saoirse blinked, surprised. “Bibiana?”
“Sí, señora. She is alone.”
Within minutes, Saoirse was standing in the sitting room, the one lined with old portraits of Suarez ancestors. The scent of her sister-in-law’s favorite tuberose plant had already replaced the faint ghost of white roses. Saoirse was forever in awe of how fast the staff worked, how quickly they changed things to suit whoever they deemed superior in any given room.
Bibiana was all tweed and symmetry, her greying hair pinned perfectly, her jewelry restrained but unmistakably ancestral. She kissed both of Saoirse’s cheeks, her lips barely grazing skin. Saoirse could not help inhaling her faint peppermint essence.
“You look pale,” Bibiana said with an air of concern that didn’t quite mask appraisal, and immediately reminded her of Roman’s last words to her before he left over a week ago. “I thought I’d come see my nephew and niece with their father out of the way. It’s been too long.”
“I’m glad you did,” Saoirse said softly.
They sat. Tea was brought with china, silver, lemon slices cut thin as petals. Bibiana declined sugar. Her gaze, steady and composed, lingered on Saoirse’s face a moment too long.
“You’re alone,” Bibiana asked.
“Roman is traveling again,” Saoirse answered simply, though she knew Bibiana knew this.
“Of course,” Bibiana said, as if it explained everything. “He does so much. We all rely on him.”
Saoirse smiled faintly. “Yes.”
“He does too much himself. I keep telling him to delegate more.” Bibiana stirred her tea, though she hadn’t added anything to it. “And how are you keeping busy?”
The question caught Saoirse off guard. “I have the twins,” she managed to reply.
“Yes,” Bibiana said slowly. “Such beautiful children. But children sleep often at this age, don’t they? What do you do when they sleep?”
Saoirse blinked, caught off guard again. She hadn't had direct conversations that lasted this long in a while… with anyone. “I read. I write… sometimes.”
Bibiana tilted her head. “Oh? Roman mentioned you’re very private about it.”
Saoirse nodded, though something in her chest tightened. “I used to write all the time,” she admitted quietly. “Before. But lately… it doesn’t come.”
Bibiana studied her. “You mean you’ve lost the habit.”
“Maybe. The silence here is too… complete. It makes my head feel full but empty at the same time.”
Bibiana didn’t rush to fill the pause. “That’s how large houses are meant to feel. Stillness is discipline, something to value.”
Saoirse said before she could stop herself, “Sometimes it feels like it’s swallowing me.”
Bibiana’s eyes lifted then, sharp and unblinking. “Careful with that kind of talk,” she said, her tone still light but her meaning precise. “People misunderstand it. They start asking questions that are better left unasked.”
Saoirse flushed. “I didn’t mean—”
“I know what you meant.” Bibiana leaned back. “Roman married you because you were different. Fresh air in an old house. Don’t confuse that for permission to open all the windows.”
The words landed like a measured slap. It was controlled, not cruel, but final, and Saoirse tried to recover. “I only meant…” A silence stretched between them, polite but taut.
“I’ve heard you’ve been having trouble sleeping,” Bibiana said at last, her tone conversational, but her eyes searching. “The staff worry, you know. They care for you.”
Saoirse’s throat went dry. “They shouldn’t worry.”
“No, of course not.” Bibiana smiled, sipping her tea. “You must miss your own family. England feels very far from here.”
“I’m used to distance,” Saoirse said quickly, then hesitated, fingers tightening around her teacup. Bibiana studied her then, eyes sharp beneath the softness. Saoirse forced a smile. Bibiana returned the smile, perfectly polite, perfectly unconvinced. “It’s just… quiet here, when he’s away. Sometimes too quiet. I don’t think I was made for this kind of silence.”
Bibiana’s spoon paused mid-stir. “You mean loneliness?”
Saoirse exhaled. “Yes. Maybe. I keep thinking I should be grateful. Everything’s so beautiful, so well-ordered… but sometimes, it feels like I’m watching my own life from the outside.” She looked down quickly, as if ashamed of saying it aloud. “I sound ungrateful.”
“Not ungrateful. Just young.” She placed her spoon neatly on the saucer, her movements exact, almost ceremonial. “You mustn’t let sadness make you visible. The world notices cracks, and when they do, they tear at it.”
Saoirse’s eyes lifted, startled by the frankness. “I’m not trying to be visible.”
Bibiana straightened, smoothing her skirt. “You’re a Suarez now. What happens inside these walls stays immaculate, always.” The words felt like both reassurance and threat.
“Okay,” was all Saoirse could manage.
“Everyone is lonely in our world,” Bibiana continued her lecture, and Saoirse looked down at her hands. “It’s the cost of continuity. You have your children now. That should be enough. Make it enough,” she said softly. “The rest of us did.”
Saoirse nodded, feeling the strange, sudden urge to cry.
Bibiana’s teacup clicked neatly against its saucer. “Roman will be home before long. Keep the house in order, keep yourself in order. The rest is noise.”
Saoirse swallowed. “You make it sound easy.”
“It’s not easy. It’s expected.” Bibiana gave a faint, humorless smile. “By the way,” she said, her tone brisk again, “The Foundation board meets next month. You should begin participating again. The birth is far behind you now.”
Saoirse blinked. “Roman didn’t mention it.”
Bibiana adjusted the button at her wrist, unbothered. “He wouldn’t. He thinks he’s protecting you, but public absence becomes gossip. I’ll have the Secretariat send you the minutes. Something, anything, under your name would be useful.”
“I’ll try,” Saoirse said.
“Don’t try. Do. The family looks better when its wives are industrious.” She met Saoirse’s eyes. “Good,” she said finally, as if sealing the conversation shut. “I won’t trouble you long.” She rose then, smoothing her long tweed skirt, every movement deliberate and economical. “May I see the twins before I go?”
“Of course,” Saoirse mumbled.
Bibiana crossed the long hall with her into the nursery, admired the babies with clinical precision, touched none of them, and pronounced them, “Perfect”.
Before leaving, Bibiana paused by the main doors as Saoirse escorted her to them. “Saoirse,” she said, without turning, “The family will start watching you now. It’s what we do when something seems… delicate.”
Saoirse stood frozen.
“Take care of yourself.” Bibiana glanced back once, eyes flat as glass. “And sleep at night, for God’s sake. People talk.”
Then she was gone, the peppermint lingering like a closing door. The silence that followed was colder than before.
Marta appeared a few minutes later to clear the tea tray. She moved quietly, but Saoirse could tell by her lowered gaze that the whole house had already heard every word.
At the window, Saoirse watched Bibiana’s old car glide down the long drive until it disappeared into the cypress.
She touched her wrist, the one Roman had held on her last visit just two days ago, his thumb tracing slow, possessive circles, and wondered if Bibiana could see the same invisible mark he’d left.
She turned back toward the nursery. The twins slept on, unaware, but Saoirse felt a new kind of gaze on her. It wasn’t just Roman’s anymore, unseen and omnipotent, but the family’s. She felt the house swiftly transforming into a mirror, and in its reflection, she wasn’t sure what they saw.
When night came, she tried to obey Bibiana’s last command. She lay in bed, eyes closed, breathing carefully. Sleep at night… people talk. She repeated it like prayer.
Sleep didn’t come.
She was never tired anymore; there was nothing to burn energy on, so how could she fall asleep?
By two, she was pacing again. The marble floor cooled her feet. In the nursery, one of the babies whimpered. David, she thought. She lifted him, careful not to wake Mariana, and held him against her shoulder. The rhythm of his breathing anchored her for a moment.
Quietly, Lisa appeared in the doorway. “Señora,” she whispered, smiling as if she’d just arrived by chance. “Let me help you. I was checking on him.”
Saoirse nodded, surrendering the baby. “He was dreaming.” Her voice came out weak and unsure.
“Yes,” Lisa said softly. “They dream even when they don’t know what of.”
Saoirse lingered by the crib until the tiny chest rose and fell evenly again. When she turned toward the hallway, Marta was there, half in shadow, murmuring to another maid. Their words drifted through the corridor like incense, part pity, part warning.
Back in her room, Saoirse stood at the window until dawn, watching the slow bleed of light over the sea. As the sun rose, she was determined to do better. Bibiana’s words pulsed through her head like an instruction manual. Order, discipline, contribution.
The house moved around her with its usual precision.
After spending most of the morning with the twins and their nannies, she had a late breakfast alone on the balcony, steam rising from the coffee untouched. She opened her journal, the leather spine stiff from disuse. Her handwriting was smaller still, shrinking into itself. She tried to remember everything she’d learned at the Madrid residency about writing even when there was no inspiration, and managed three hesitant lines about light, about silence, about a door that wouldn’t open. Before the ink dried, she tore the page out and folded it neatly into the pocket of her robe.
Afternoon. A call came from the Foundation secretary, who mentioned Bibiana before getting into charitable endowments, gala schedules, and her long-term public “re-engagement strategy”. Saoirse listened, agreed, thanked them. When the call ended, she sat still for several minutes, unsure whether she’d actually spoken.
Marta informed her that she had wellness treatments scheduled. A nurse came first, quiet and efficient, to attach vitamin drips to her vein, one after the other. Then the facialist, whispering about “helping her feel herself again,” as she worked Allegra’s preferred scent into Saoirse’s skin. By the time the stylist arrived to assess her posture and take her measurements without asking, Saoirse herself had stopped asking why. She just stood there as they measured.
A priest arrived from the family’s favored Madrid parish. His cassock smelled faintly of beeswax. He spoke of patience, grace, and how stillness was a form of faith.
“A wife is a pillar, Señora,” he told her gently, “Stand steady, and you sanctify the house.”
He handed her a stunning rosary made out of baroque pearls and solid gold, blessed by the Holy Father himself. She folded her hands around it and let the sermon wash over her like warm water that left her colder when it passed. When he left, Marta replaced the lilies, Allegra’s lilies, with white roses.
They called it wellness, but it was calibration, ensuring she still fit the sacred mold Roman preferred. Later, during a chauffeured drive through the estate with Emilio in the front passenger seat, cypress shadows flickered across her reflection in the glass. The nurse, the priest, the air itself, all of it disciplined and curated.
Evening came with letters from charities, swatches of fabric she pretended to select for the nursery redecoration the staff had already planned, silver-framed photos to approve, floral arrangements. Marta brought her tea, and Saoirse asked her opinion about nothing in particular just to hear another voice.
When night came, she felt exhausted enough to believe she could finally obey Bibiana’s last command. She lay in bed, eyes closed, breathing carefully. Sleep at night. People talk. She repeated it like prayer, still clutching the pearl and gold rosary in her left hand.
Sleep didn’t come.
Allegra had been right about the pattern, but wrong about the girl. Saoirse never learned how to turn being needed into power. She only learned how to vanish beneath it.
+
She didn’t remember how many days had passed.
The courtyard was almost blue under the night lamps, a light designed to look like moonlight, calibrated to his specifications. Every perimeter light, every motion sensor, every surveillance feed in the house had a code. Marco knew them all.
He walked his usual route. North wall to terrace, terrace to lemon grove, lemon grove back to the sea gate, a ritual that had become muscle memory. The gravel whispered under his boots.
He liked this hour best, the darkest, earliest hours of the morning when the house was sealed, the guards posted, the cameras still humming, the kind of stillness that made men feel useful. But lately, something had started to unsettle him, not danger exactly, but the absence of it. The air felt too clean, too perfect, like the kind of silence that smothers noise before it starts.
He turned toward the main house and stopped.
Up on the third-floor landing, behind the long window of the west corridor, a figure moved slow, pale, barefoot.
The Señora.
She didn’t look down. She didn’t even seem to see the world beneath her, only the dark reflection of herself in the glass. Her nightgown clung faintly in the blue light, her hair unbound. She was carrying something small, a folded blanket, maybe, or a child’s toy. She set it on the sill, then just stood there, staring at nothing.
Marco exhaled, quiet. He’d seen her like this before, always alone, always in motion, walking the halls long after the lights were out, never frantic, never crying, just… searching.
He thought of Roman Suarez, of men who loved people the way a gardener loves his tools, carefully, conditionally, ready to replace them if they dulled. And yet, he couldn’t bring himself to pity the man, only her. He’d never spoken of it to anyone, not even Javier. But each time he saw her wandering, some private ache twisted in him, the kind you got watching an injured bird that didn’t know it was injured.
He thought of the scholarship letters stacked on his desk upstairs, his daughter’s tuition already paid, her uniform already ordered, and the envelope that had come with no sender, only a single note:

She hadn't even signed it, but he knew it was her. He understood the message.
Above, Saoirse turned from the window and disappeared down the corridor. The curtain fell back into place. Marco finished his round, pausing once at the sea gate, where the sound of waves against the cliff almost drowned out the hum of the security system. He stood there a moment longer than necessary, staring at the horizon’s dark water with no ships in sight. The Señor owned the water and airways for miles.
When he turned back, the house was perfect again.
Saoirse never meant to stay awake. She just could never breathe well anymore. Sometimes, the quiet made her feel like the house was holding its breath, waiting for her to move so it could exhale.
With the hand that held the rosary, she picked up the folded blanket at the foot of the chair, Mariana’s, and walked into the corridor barefoot, her robe trailing. The marble was cool against her soles, the scent of sterilized air clinging to the walls. She didn’t turn on the light. The dim safety lamps were enough, blue-white halos every few steps.
Down the hallway, she passed the nursery door. Both twins slept, Lisa and Lucia close by, which was new. David and Mari’s small shapes curled into white linen, their breathing amplified like distant surf. She paused, watching the rhythm, inhale, exhale, the only natural sound left in the house.
She moved on. The window at the far end of the convoluted gilded corridor glowed faintly, its glass reflecting her like a ghost. Beyond it, the courtyard lights shimmered against the lemon trees. She could make out one of the guards, a dark silhouette moving along the perimeter path. Marco. He was always there, a steadying constant.
For a moment, she envied him, the certainty of duty, the luxury of a task that could be completed.
Her reflection wavered in the glass. She looked thinner lately. Her hair was longer and too soft at the ends. The lace nightgown slipped from one shoulder. She pulled it back absently and wondered if Roman would have noticed. He always said he liked her hair up, her clothes simple. He would murmur his preferences while touching the hollow of her throat like a seal of approval.
He was still gone. Milan, maybe, or Zurich. She never really knew, did she? Over their brief call this morning, he’d mentioned both cities, but which was it? Or was it both? She leaned her forehead against the glass. The cold spread through her skin. Down below, she thought she saw the guard pause, maybe he’d looked up, maybe he hadn’t, and then move on.
She lifted the folded blanket to the sill, the rosary still in hand, and smoothed it as if it were a sleeping child. Her hands looked translucent in the lamplight. The blanket smelled faintly of milk and the rosewater lotion the nannies used on the twins. It was such a small, clean scent, the kind that made her ache.
She closed her eyes. For a moment, she imagined the sound of Roman’s voice, low, sure, saying her name the way he used to when the world still felt soft around it. Saoirse. That slow, deliberate way, as if the syllables themselves were something he’d built and owned.
Her chest tightened, a tear rolled down one eye.
When she opened her eyes again, she wasn’t sure how long she’d been standing there. The courtyard light had shifted, and the guard was gone.
She turned back down the corridor, past the nursery again. Mariana whimpered softly in her sleep, so Saoirse entered and brushed her hair from her face. She lifted her daughter. The infant’s head rested against her chest, warm and impossibly small.
“It’s all right,” she whispered, pacing. “You’re all right.” Mariana sighed. Saoirse kept walking, her bare feet soundless on the carpet.
Through the open door, the scent reached her, roses, faint but unmistakable. She looked toward the hall table and saw them, a new vase, fresh from delivery earlier in the night, white again, sunlight trapped in glass.
For a moment, she only stared. Then she reached out, brushing one petal with her fingertip, the gold of the rosary’s crucifix clinking against the glass of the large vase. The petal’s softness startled her. Her grandmother’s voice rose in her mind, haunting her, quiet as breath. They thrive on neglect. She couldn’t get it out of her head.
Saoirse smiled faintly, not sure why. She pressed her finger to her lips, then to the baby’s head, as if sealing a secret neither of them could name. She kept walking again, farther than she meant to, past the main living area, past the guest wings, nearly to the eastern wing she rarely entered. Only the rhythm of the baby’s sighs kept her tethered to the moment.
She had just begun to hum an old melody without words as she paced, Mariana cradled to her chest, when she heard the faint padding of soft shoes on marble. The corridor lights were faint blue rings, halos every few steps.
Lisa’s voice followed. “Señora,” she called, barely above a whisper, too gentle to be casual, “You’re awake again?”
Saoirse turned slowly. Lisa stood a few steps away, wrapped in her gray uniform cardigan, hair pinned in the severe way she preferred at night, her expression composed but unmistakably tight. Behind her, one of the auxiliary nannies lingered at the corridor’s bend, pretending to adjust a sconce. There were always two of them, always nearby these days.
“I couldn’t sleep,” Saoirse said. Even as she spoke the words, she saw Bibiana's look of disappointment in her mind's eye. Her tone was even, though she could see Lisa’s eyes move to the bundle in her arms. Mariana stirred, sighing against her chest.
“I know,” Lisa said, stepping closer. Her smile was tender and strained. “She’s restless tonight, yes? I heard her on the monitor and came to check. She sounded unsettled.”
“You heard her?” Saoirse asked, looking down at her daughter. The baby had gone utterly still, as if the world outside the heartbeat she rested on no longer existed.
Lisa nodded. “Just a small sound, como un pajarito.” Mariana had only whimpered once, but it gave her permission to approach. She reached out and touched the edge of her blanket. “Maybe she is hungry again.” Her gaze flicked, just briefly, toward the long stretch of corridor behind them, but that silent assessment was impossible to miss.
Saoirse suddenly realized how far she’d walked. How far from the nursery. How far from anyone else.
“She wanted air,” Saoirse whispered finally, tightening her hold. “The rooms feel… suffocating at night. They are too clean. You can’t breathe in them.”
Lisa nodded, but her throat worked. “Of course.” She made another slow step forward. “But the monitors didn’t catch movement until you were almost at the east wing.”
Saoirse frowned slightly. “I didn’t notice.”
“I know,” Lisa said gently. “That’s why I came.”
And there it was, the fear she tried to hide. Not fear of Saoirse, but fear for the baby. Fear of what exhaustion, sedatives, and sorrow could do. Fear of the story they would all have to tell if something happened to the babies on their watch.
“I wasn’t going anywhere,” Saoirse said, a little too fast.
“No, of course,” Lisa soothed, even though her eyes betrayed relief. She hesitated. The air between them was fragile, like a thread stretched to its last strand. Then she said, “It’s very late. Let me take her for a moment while you rest. Just until she settles.” She extended her arms slowly, the gesture deferential, practiced, the way one might approach a saint with an offering.
Saoirse held Mariana tighter, the motion instinctive and small. The rosary at her wrist clinked softly against the baby’s head. “She’s not heavy.”
“No, of course not,” Lisa said quickly. “I only meant…” She stopped. There was no safe way to finish the sentence.
“She’s sleeping.”
“I know,” Lisa whispered. “But babies this young startle easily. And… It’s colder near this end of the hall.” A diplomatic way of saying it is not safe for her to be this far from her bed.
Saoirse looked down at Mariana. The baby’s breath warmed her collarbone. She hadn’t even realized she’d wandered so far. Lisa’s careful, reverent posture made the truth sting even more. They didn’t trust her with her own child in the dark.
The silence filled with the hum of the vents, the sigh of the night system breathing for them. Somewhere far off, a clock clicked into the next hour.
Then, almost imperceptibly, Saoirse’s shoulders lowered. “All right,” she said. “Just for a moment.”
Lisa stepped forward. The exchange was careful, reverent, as if handling sacred glass. When Mariana’s weight passed from mother to nanny, the air seemed to tilt, Lisa’s shoulders loosened, a micro-release Saoirse saw despite Lisa’s restraint. Saoirse’s hands hovered a second longer than necessary, brushing the baby’s hair once, twice, as if memorizing its temperature.
The auxiliary nanny observed from her corner, silent, eyes lowered.
Lisa rocked the baby lightly. “She settled quickly tonight,” she murmured, soothing both infant and mother. But Saoirse heard what she really meant: Thank God nothing happened.
Saoirse touched the blanket one last time. “She sleeps easier with me.”
“Yes, sí,” Lisa said immediately. “Of course.” Her voice trembled just once.
Lisa turned to go, murmuring something about feeding schedules. Halfway down the corridor, she glanced back. Saoirse was still standing there in the blue-white light, bare feet against marble, one hand holding the rosary, the other touching the space where her daughter had been.
When Lisa disappeared into the nursery, the auxiliary nanny emerged, her slippers soundless. She met Saoirse’s eyes briefly, bowed her head, and whispered, “Buenas noches, Señora.”
Saoirse didn’t answer. She wanted to follow, to watch them return her daughter gently into her crib, but she couldn’t move.
When she finally returned to her room, she noticed the faint outline of a crucifix reflected in the window. One of the staff had hung it again over the nursery door. It glimmered faintly in the corridor light, as if guarding something fragile or cursed. They rearranged shifts. They listened for footsteps at odd hours. They whispered about la señora irlandesa or la dama del mármol who wandered marble halls barefoot at 3 a.m. with a baby in her arms and a rosary in her fist.
She stood a while longer, watching the soft glow of the nursery monitor, until her eyes blurred.
+
It was nearly dawn when they gathered in the service kitchen, the hour when night-shift blurred with morning-shift. The fluorescent light hummed. Coffee steamed in mismatched mugs. Their voices hovered at the level of breath, careful because the house always felt like it listened.
Lisa rubbed her hands over her arms, warming the goosebumps that hadn’t left since she found Saoirse in the eastern hall.
“She didn’t even hear me call her at first,” she whispered. “She just kept… walking like she wasn’t touching the floor.”
Lucia crossed herself quickly. “I told you. La señora is like a spirit now.”
One of the junior maids who was barely twenty-two and fresh out of Valencia leaned in, eyes wide. “People say the Irish have thin veils,” she murmured. “Between them and the… other side.”
Lucia shook her head sharply. “Don’t be silly, niña. She’s just lonely.” But her voice wavered, betraying the doubt.
The night butler dried a glass with the care of someone who used ritual to steady himself. “It’s the house...” he gestured vaguely upward, to the gilded ceilings and echoing corridors. “...they swallow sound. If you walk long enough in them, especially alone…” He trailed off.
“You start to disappear into the walls,” one of the other maids supplied.
Lucia groaned. “Ay Dios mío.”
Lisa spoke again, voice low and hoarse. “She walked past the east wing with the baby.”
Every head lifted.
“That far?”
Lisa nodded, shame and fear mingling on her face. “I don’t think she realized. She looked… startled when I mentioned it.”
They all fell silent, the kind of silence that carried meaning.
Someone whispered, “Do you think she would ever—?”
“No,” Lisa snapped, more sharply than intended. “No. She loves them. She does. I see it.” But she lowered her eyes, the truth pressing on her ribs.
Lucia poured water into the kettle. “Grief can turn strange, Lisa. My aunt, after the miscarriage, she started sleepwalking. Once, she walked into the garden in the rain and didn’t even wake.”
“This is different,” Lisa whispered.
Marta, who had sat at one corner of the large kitchen island silently reviewing household paperwork, always hesitant to talk about their employers, chipped in for the first time that night, “Since the twins arrived… and since Señor left again, she drifts.” Her voice softened. “Like she’s not sure the ground will hold her.”
Lucia made the sign of the cross again. She did it more often lately. “She moves as if she’s listening for something.” She shuddered. “The walls feel colder when she’s walking.”
“No more of that,” Lisa hissed, though she didn't entirely disagree.
For a long moment, none of them spoke. The maids left the room with Marta to begin the day’s cleaning, though nothing in the untouched house particularly needed it.
When the doors closed behind them, the butler said to the nannies and gardeners, “If you see a woman wandering marble halls at three in the morning, barefoot, whispering to rosaries and shadows, in old stories, she’s a ghost.”
Lisa swallowed hard. “No. She’s alive, and she needs help.”
“Help from who?” Lucia asked. “Señor is never here.”
A gardener looked toward the ceiling, toward the winding halls above. His voice dropped to a reverent hush, “La dama del mármol.” The lady of the marble.
The others shivered because the name fit too well, too beautifully, the quiet figure who wandered Roman Suarez’s golden halls like someone caught between being cherished and being forgotten.







