On the morning of the town market, the dew still wet the palm roofs. Doña Lupita, bent over, pushed her scrap metal cart past the large market. Her feet, hardened by years of walking, and her thin, wrinkled hands dragged a heavy sack.
She had no one close to her; she lived alone in a ramshackle shack on the canal bank, collecting each day what others threw away to trade for corn or beans and survive. That day, on a corner of the market, she heard a faint cry. A newborn, still red and fragile, had been left inside an old aluminum basin.
Beside it, a crumpled piece of paper read:
“Please, let someone with a good heart take this child in.”
Doña Lupita remained motionless. Her cloudy eyes slowly focused on that tiny life. No one approached.
People passed by, shaking their heads, murmuring in annoyance:
“These days, if one can barely feed oneself, who would dare to shoulder a destiny as heavy as a mountain…?”
But Doña Lupita was different. She lifted the baby with her trembling hands. The child grabbed her finger and squeezed it gently.
The old woman’s heart trembled, but at the same time it was filled with unexpected warmth. “My son, you have no one… and I have no one either. Let’s go together, okay?” she whispered tenderly.
From that day on, the humble shack had the cry of a baby, the flickering light of the oil lamp that burned until dawn, and an elderly mother who carefully measured every drop of milk and every spoonful of atole to raise that child with everything she had. In the poor neighborhood, they called her crazy. Some even said directly:
“You raise him, and when he grows up, he’ll leave you alone.
He’s not your blood, you’re just putting a burden on yourself.”
She just smiled, her gaze lost in the distance:
“Maybe so. But now I have a boy who calls me ‘Mom.’ In my life, I’ve never had anything so beautiful.”
She named the child Esperanza, although everyone called him Hugo—because that’s what he meant to her: hope. He grew up with soaked tortillas, patched-up clothes, but also with the values, respect, and affection his mother instilled in him, in addition to the determination to study.
Every night, Doña Lupita went out late collecting cardboard and bottles. Even tired, she washed Hugo’s school uniform. Seeing her, the boy felt more love and strength to excel.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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