Patricia stayed frozen in the bank line for a second too long, long enough for her body to betray what her mind was trying to deny. Her fingers went cold. Her throat tightened as if someone had tightened a cord around it. The man stepped forward when the teller called the next customer, and the movement was so familiar it felt like someone pressing on a bruise that had never healed. He leaned slightly to the left as he walked, a habit Roberto had picked up years ago after a soccer injury. He adjusted his glasses with the same impatient little tap.
He even cleared his throat the same way, like he was apologizing to the air for taking up space. Patricia’s brain tried to argue: it’s coincidence, it’s a stranger, you’ve spent seventeen years training your eyes to see him in everyone. But the argument fell apart when the teller said, “Señor Campos,” and the man reacted with a quick, automatic lift of his chin—like a dog hearing its name. Patricia felt her knees soften. Campos. Not a common name in Mexico City, not when it lined up with that profile, those hands, that stubborn posture.