A Bride Was Beaten Over Her Condo, Then Her Father Came Back-xurixuri

My daughter knocked on my door at 3:00 in the morning, and the sound was so weak I almost thought I had imagined it.

It was not the kind of knock that makes you angry because it wakes you up. It was the kind that makes your body move before your mind understands why.

My apartment was dark except for the little stove light in the kitchen, the one I always left on because I hated waking up to a black room.

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The air smelled like cold coffee, lavender laundry detergent, and the rain that had been tapping the window since midnight.

I opened the door expecting a neighbor, a mistake, maybe someone from the building with a complaint about a leak.

Instead, I found my daughter in the hallway.

Sofia stood under the buzzing fluorescent light in her wedding dress, covered in blood.

For one long second, I did not breathe.

That morning, I had zipped that dress myself.

I had stood behind her in my bedroom with a mouth full of bobby pins, smoothing the lace over her shoulders while she laughed at her own nerves and asked me three times if the veil looked crooked.

She had smelled like hairspray and vanilla lotion. She had looked young, hopeful, and so painfully beautiful that I had turned away before she saw me crying.

Now the back of the gown was torn open, her lip was split, one cheek had swollen badly, and purple marks wrapped around both arms.

“Mom,” she whispered.

Then she collapsed.

I caught her under the arms and nearly went down with her.

She was cold in the way fear makes a person cold from the inside out.

“Baby, what happened?”

Her fingers dug into my wrist hard enough to hurt.

“Don’t call the hospital,” she begged. “Please. They said if I report it, they’ll kill me.”

The hallway tilted.

I dragged her inside, kicked the door shut, and locked the deadbolt, the chain, and the little swing latch I usually forgot existed.

“Who said that?”

Sofia squeezed her eyes shut.

“Carmen,” she said. “Javier’s mother.”

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