She didn’t have time to die.
So Elena got up. She tightened her robe, walked to the kitchen, and began to scrub the burnt pan from dinner. She scrubbed with the fury of someone who had no time for endings, only for the stubborn, radiant business of still being here . Sin tiempo para morir
Not because she was brave. Not because she had accepted her fate. But because the sink was still leaking. Because Mateo needed his temperature taken at 2:00 AM. Because her daughter had a science fair next Tuesday. Because there was a birthday party to plan, a garden to water, a novel on her nightstand she was only halfway through. She didn’t have time to die
The clock on the wall had stopped at 11:47, but Elena didn’t notice. Her watch had died two days ago, somewhere between the fourth cup of coffee and the eleventh page of her daughter’s unfinished physics homework. The city outside her window was a blur of headlights and rain, indifferent to the small apocalypse unfolding in her chest. She scrubbed with the fury of someone who
At home, the laundry was piled on the chair. A pot of lentils bubbled on the stove. Her son, Mateo, had a fever. Her mother called twice to complain about the neighbor’s dog. There were bills to pay, a parent-teacher conference to attend, a leak under the sink that needed fixing. The world did not pause for her expiration date. It demanded she remain standing.
The doctor had used words like aggressive and metastasis . He had used the word months . She had nodded, thanked him, and driven straight to the grocery store to buy a bag of oranges. Because that’s what you do. You buy oranges. You keep moving.