The first time Laura realized that living under the same roof as her mother-in-law would destroy her was not the night she was slapped, but months earlier, when silence became her daily language. Carmen Morales had a way of filling every room with her presence, her sharp voice cutting through the air like a blade. From the moment Laura and Javier were forced to move into Carmen’s apartment in Seville after Javier lost his job, nothing Laura did was ever right. The way she folded laundry was wrong. The way she seasoned food was wrong. Even the way she spoke—soft, measured, polite—was wrong in Carmen’s eyes. “You speak like you think you’re better than us,” Carmen would say, narrowing her eyes.
Laura learned to nod, to lower her gaze, to swallow words before they reached her lips. She told herself it was temporary. She told herself Javier would find work again. She told herself love meant endurance. But slowly, the apartment began to feel smaller, the walls closing in as Carmen’s contempt grew bolder. What hurt most was not Carmen’s cruelty, but Javier’s silence. At first, he would shrug uncomfortably, whisper apologies afterward, promise things would improve.