“Yes, you are very beautiful, put on your wedding dress and marry me…”, the rich man said to the beggar woman.
The rain fell on Insurgentes Avenue with that gray fury that makes Mexico City seem even more immense and colder. Alejandro Salazar, a forty-two-year-old real estate developer, left the office early for the first time in months. He had no desire to look at contracts, numbers, or buildings anymore. Since his wife, Verónica, had died of cancer three years earlier, work had become his refuge.
He was walking quickly, with the collar of his coat turned up, when he saw her.
Sitting on the wet bench, huddled under a sodden piece of cardboard, was a woman with dark hair plastered to her face by the rain. Her clothes were worn, her hands icy, and her lips purple with cold. Even so, when she lifted her face and looked at him, Alejandro stopped.
It wasn’t her beauty, though she had it. It was the dignity in her brown eyes.
—Please… even just a coin —she murmured, extending a trembling hand.
Alejandro didn’t give him a single coin. He bent down on the wet pavement, not caring about the expensive suit, and placed several bills in his hand. Then he closed his umbrella and handed it to him.
—Here. This will be more useful than that cardboard box.
The woman looked at him in bewilderment, as if she were not used to someone looking her in the eyes.
—Thank you, sir… God bless you.
Her voice had an education that didn’t match her appearance. Alejandro noticed it instantly.
-What’s it called?
—Guadalupe… but they call me Lupita.
—Lupita, do you have a place to sleep tonight?
She lowered her gaze and slowly shook her head.
Alejandro looked up at the darkened sky, then looked back at her.
—Come with me. I’ll take you somewhere warm.
—No need, sir. I’ll manage.
“It’s not charity,” he said with gentle firmness. “It’s aid.”
Something in that tone achieved what distrust couldn’t. Lupita agreed. Alejandro took her to a small hotel, paid for a room, a hot meal, and clean clothes from the laundry service. Before leaving, the woman stopped him.
—Why are you doing this for me?
Alejandro was silent for a second. The truth was, he didn’t even know himself.
—Because we all deserve a second chance.
He couldn’t sleep that night. The image of Lupita, alone in the rain, kept haunting him. Nor did the way she had said thank you, without humiliation. As if misery had taken everything from her but her soul.
The next morning he returned to the hotel.
Lupita had already bathed and was wearing a simple dress that someone had lent her. Without the dirt on her face, she looked much younger. Maybe thirty-five. She was beautiful in a serene way, with an ancient sadness in her eyes.
They went downstairs for breakfast.
Alejandro watched her use the cutlery with elegance, eat slowly, and ask permission before having another cup of coffee.
“You weren’t born on the street,” he finally said.
Lupita put the little spoon down on the plate.
-No.
-What happened?
She turned the cup in her hands.
—Sometimes life makes a mistake costly.
Alejandro understood that she wasn’t going to tell him any more, so he changed the subject.
—Does he know how to do anything besides survive?
Lupita looked up, almost offended.
—I was a literature teacher at a private high school.
That surprised him.
—Then I have a proposal. My daughter, Camila, is sixteen years old. She’s brilliant at almost everything, except Spanish and literature. She needs private lessons. If you accept, she can work with us.
—Sir… I have no documents, no references, nowhere to live.
—I have a guesthouse on my property in Polanco. You can stay there while you work. And we’ll sort out the paperwork.
Lupita stared at him as if she feared it was all a trap.
—Why do you insist?
—Because when I saw you yesterday I thought the world had been too cruel to you. And because I believe you can still get back up.
Lupita’s eyes filled with tears.
—I don’t know if I deserve so much kindness.
—That’s not up to you to decide now—Alejandro replied. —Just say yes.
Lupita nodded.
—I accept. But I want a salary. I don’t want charity.
Alejandro smiled for the first time in days.
—Deal.
Alejandro’s house was large, elegant, and quiet. Too quiet. Camila showed up that afternoon in her school uniform, with a high ponytail and the expression of someone who was already tired of her father organizing her life.
“Are you the new teacher?” she asked bluntly.
—I’m Guadalupe. But you can call me Lupita.
Camila studied it with curiosity.
—My dad said you’re special. That usually means I should behave.
Lupita let out an involuntary laugh. And that small gesture disarmed the teenager.
The first class was a surprise for both of them.
Camila hated reading because, according to her, “teachers ruined the books by explaining too much.” But Lupita didn’t start with dates or biographies. She began by asking her about pain, jealousy, guilt, and loneliness. She spoke to her about Pedro Páramo as if it were a living story, not a corpse in a library.
When the hour was over, Camila closed the book in disappointment.
—Already? It was just getting good.
That night, Alejandro found his daughter reading alone in the garden.
-What are you doing?
—Lupita says that books hold secrets if you learn to listen. I want to discover them before tomorrow.
He looked at her silently. It had been years since he’d seen that spark in Camila’s eyes.
The following weeks changed the house.
Camila improved in school, but above all, she started laughing again. Lupita planted flowers in abandoned pots, fixed up the guest house as if it were a proper refuge, and filled the kitchen with aromas Alejandro had forgotten: cinnamon, freshly brewed coffee, vegetable soup, toast with butter.
And as the house revived, so did he.
One night he found her crying in the garden.
-What happened?
Lupita dried her face quickly.
—Today marks one year since I lost my life.
Alejandro didn’t interrupt her. He just sat down next to her.
Then Lupita spoke.
She told him she had a younger brother, Tomás, a drug addict. She said she had tried to save him time and time again. One day he showed up trembling, saying he owed money to dangerous people. Desperate to help him, she took money from the school where she worked, convinced she would pay it back in a few days. But Tomás used the money to get high, disappeared, and the theft was discovered.
She lost her job. She lost her reputation. She lost her apartment. No one ever hired her again. She was left all alone. She fell so low that she ended up living on the streets.
When she finished, Lupita hugged herself, as if she still felt embarrassed.
—I’m a woman who stole, Alejandro. It doesn’t matter why. I did it.
Alejandro took a few seconds to speak.
—No. You are a woman who made a mistake out of love for her brother and paid a disproportionate price for it.
Lupita looked at him, incredulous.
—How can you say that?
—Because I see how you treat my daughter. Because no one with a rotten heart teaches like you, cares like you, loves like you.
Lupita cried harder. This time not from shame, but from relief.
That night they kissed for the first time.
It was a slow, careful, almost fearful kiss. As if they both knew they were touching something fragile and precious.
Camila found out before they tried to tell her.
“Finally,” she said, crossing her arms. “I thought they’d never stop staring at each other like silly lovebirds.”
For a few months, everything seemed possible.
Until Alejandro decided to introduce her to his friends.
He organized an intimate dinner. “I want them to get to know you,” he told her. Lupita accepted out of love, even though fear made her stomach churn.
The night was a disaster.
The smiles were polite, but the questions were sharp. Where had she worked before? How exactly had Alejandro met her? Why was she living in the house? Didn’t it all seem too fast?
When Alejandro clearly stated that Lupita was his girlfriend, one of his friends uttered a phrase that ruined everything:
“I just hope they’re not using you, Alejandro. You’re a rich man, vulnerable… an easy target.”
Lupita felt the humiliation like a slap in the face.
He said nothing that night. But the next day he made a decision.
“I’m moving out,” she announced to Alejandro. “I need to prove to myself that I can stand on my own and that what I feel for you doesn’t stem from dependence.”
Alexander paled.
—You don’t have to do that.
—Yes. If I ever return, I want to return free.
Camila cried as if she were being torn away from her mother again.
Even so, Lupita left.
She rented a small room in the south of the city and started over. She gave private lessons, recovered documents, learned to live on very little, but on her own. Not a single day went by without her thinking about Alejandro and Camila. And every night, as she turned off the light, she wondered if she was being brave… or stupidly proud.
Three months passed.
One afternoon, as she was leaving a stationery store, she saw them by chance on the street. Alejandro and Camila were leaving a restaurant. They were both dressed up, but sad.
Camila was the first to see it.
—Lupita!
He ran to hug her so tightly that he almost made her fall.
“I miss you terribly,” she whispered, crying shamelessly. “The new teacher explains things well, but she has no soul.”
Alejandro approached slowly.
—Hello, Lupita.
She swallowed.
-Hello.
Camila, who had the sensitivity of her dead mother and the stubbornness of her father, forced them to sit down to lunch together.
And it only took an hour.
An hour listening to Camila talk, an hour watching Alejandro continue to stare at her as if no one else existed, an hour feeling the air return to her chest.
When they were finally alone for a few seconds, he asked her in a low voice:
—Are you sure now?
Lupita looked at him with her eyes full of tears.
—Yes. I learned that being independent doesn’t mean living alone. It means being able to choose. And I choose you. I choose all of you.
Alejandro closed his eyes, as if he had been waiting for those exact words for months.
—Then go back home.
Camila applauded in the middle of the restaurant, attracting glances from all over the world.
—I knew this was going to happen!
He returned. And this time he had no doubts.
Months later, on a golden November afternoon, Alejandro took her to the garden where it had all truly begun. He knelt before her with a small box in his hand.
“Guadalupe Ortega,” he said, his voice breaking, “you are the bravest woman I have ever known. You gave my daughter back her life, my home, and my heart. You are beautiful, dress as a bride and marry me.”
Lupita let out a laugh through her tears.
—That doesn’t sound like an elegant proposal.
—I don’t care about being elegant. I care about you saying yes.
Lupita nodded, crying, while Camila, hidden behind a tree like a terrible spy, ran out to hug them.
They married in the garden of their home, with white flowers, in a simple ceremony, and their happiness seemed to overflow from the windows. Camila was the maid of honor and cried more than anyone.
Over time, Lupita returned to formal teaching, and later earned a master’s degree in literature.
She also found Tomás again, now rehabilitated, working in a mechanic’s shop in Puebla. One day he arrived with trembling hands and clear eyes, begged her forgiveness on his knees, and returned, peso for peso, the money that years before had ruined her life.
Lupita hugged him.
Because by then I had already learned that forgiving does not erase the past, but it does stop allowing it to govern the future.
Years later, the house in Polanco was full again. Full of laughter, grandchildren, open books, and long dinners. Camila was now a teacher. Alejandro had a few gray hairs. Lupita had published a book about second chances. And whenever someone asked her if love could truly change a person’s life, she would smile and look at the man who had once knelt in the rain to give her an umbrella.
Then he would reply:
—Not only can he exchange it. He can give it back to you completely.
