We took a taxi toward the East Zone of São Paulo. We talked about plans and celebrations. We talked about the last deposits, birthdays, Christmas. We calculated that in five years we had sent more than six hundred thousand reais. Mom deserved every cent for everything she had sacrificed for us.
But something began to feel wrong. The streets grew narrower. The houses were made of wood and sheet metal. Children played in the mud. It looked nothing like the neighborhood we had imagined. The taxi stopped and, as we stepped out, we felt the heat, the dust, and the strong smell of sewage. Something inside me tightened.
I asked an elderly woman if Dona Florência Silva lived there. When we said we were her children, the woman began to cry and asked why we had taken so long. She told us to prepare ourselves. We ran without thinking.
The house was a shack about to collapse, with no door, just an old curtain. Mel went in first and screamed. There was Mom, lying on a thin mattress on the floor, so thin she looked like skin and bones. When she recognized me, I felt my heart break.
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