Diego Martinez was thirty-two years old and worked as a technical department manager for a large construction company in Houston, Texas. His income was comfortable, almost $95,000 a year, enough for him to drive a new truck, rent a nice apartment near the Galleria, eat at good restaurants, and be seen by many people around him as a successful man. He liked that image more than he wanted to admit.
His fiancée, Lucia Hernandez, was a preschool teacher at a small school in Katy. She did not earn much, but she was gentle, patient, warm with children, and had loved Diego for three years without ever calculating what she could gain from him. Everyone who knew them said Diego was lucky to marry a woman like Lucia.
The wedding was almost completely planned. The courthouse appointment had been scheduled, the church had reserved their date, Lucia’s dress had already been fitted, and invitations had been sent to both families. But the closer the wedding came, the more restless Diego became.
At work, he heard too many men tell stories about women who seemed sweet before marriage, then changed once they saw the man’s family, his responsibilities, or his money. His coworkers joked with him during lunch breaks, saying, “Diego, women love you when you’re paying for dinner downtown. Wait until she sees your mama’s old house and realizes your family isn’t rich.”
Diego laughed with them on the outside.
Inside, the poison started working.
He was born in a small town outside San Antonio, where his mother, Carmen Martinez, still lived alone in an old brick house with a rusted tin roof, peeling paint, a dirt yard, a few rows of vegetables, cactus pots, and an old wood stove she refused to throw away. Diego had tried many times to bring his mother to Houston, but she always refused.
“I’m used to the smell of soil, the roosters, and fresh tortillas on the comal,” Carmen would say. “In the city, I wouldn’t know how to breathe.”
Diego loved his mother, but he was ashamed of that house.
One week before the wedding, he decided to test Lucia.
He told her, “This weekend, I’ll take you to my hometown so you can meet my mom.”
Lucia smiled immediately. “Really? I’ve wanted to meet her for so long. I also want to learn how she makes tamales.”
On purpose, Diego did not drive his truck. He told Lucia it was in the shop and took her to the bus station instead. They rode an old bus from Houston to San Antonio, then took a smaller shuttle through dusty country roads, past fields, mesquite trees, low houses, and long stretches of dry land under the afternoon sun.
During the ride, Diego watched her secretly.
Lucia did not complain once. The bus was crowded, the air-conditioning barely worked, and dust blew in whenever the door opened, but she only took a tissue from her purse, wiped sweat from his forehead, and smiled.
“The place you came from is beautiful,” she said. “It feels peaceful.”
Diego said nothing.
Inside, he thought, Wait until you see my mother’s house. Let’s see if you still say that.
Before the trip, he had called his mother and said, “Mama, wear your oldest dress. If Lucia asks, tell her your back hurts, your knees hurt, and the house has been falling apart. Complain a little.”
His mother had been silent for a long time.
Then she asked, “You want to test that girl?”
Diego felt guilty, but he still said, “I just want to be sure.”
Carmen sighed. “Some people don’t need to be tested for you to know they’re good. But if this is what you want, I’ll play along.”
That afternoon, when the shuttle stopped in front of the crooked wooden gate, Diego’s heart began beating hard.
The old house appeared exactly as he remembered it: the slanted tin roof, rain-stained walls, dirt yard, dry straw near the fence, red peppers hanging under the porch, and faded embroidered cloths near the kitchen window. Carmen sat in a low chair by the door, wearing an old flowered dress, her back slightly bent, her hands resting on her knees as if she were in pain.
Diego glanced at Lucia.
He expected her to freeze.
He expected a flash of disgust.
He expected disappointment to appear in her eyes.