Lupita lingered longer than she intended.
The morning sun was already rising, and she knew the signs too well. More movement. More engines. More risk. If anyone noticed her standing near that refrigerator, questions would follow—and questions never ended well.
Then the man inside coughed again.It was a harsh, hollow sound. Dry. Lifeless. As if his chest were scraping itself from the inside.
Her thoughts went to the plastic bottle tucked inside her bag. Half a bottle. The water was warm, almost unpleasant—but it was still water.
“Stay still,” she said quietly, her voice soft but steady.
Daniel gave a weak laugh. “I don’t think I can move even if I wanted to.”
She knelt and slid the bottle through the narrow gap. He drank slowly, pausing often, like he was afraid the water might vanish if he hurried. When he finished, his hand remained at the opening, trembling—not from cold, but from fear she might leave.
“I can’t cut you loose,” Lupita said. “Not yet.”
“I don’t need that,” he whispered. “Just… please don’t tell the wrong people.”
The word wrong didn’t need explaining.
She nodded once.
Then she took off running.
She ran past the piles she recognized, past the spots where stray dogs slept and grown men argued, until she reached the cracked road leading away from the dump. She stopped at the small corner store where the owner sometimes paid her a few coins to sweep.
She didn’t tell much. She never did.This story is inspired by real experiences but has been fictionalized for creative purposes. Names, characters, and details have been altered to protect privacy. Any resemblance to actual individuals or events is coincidental. The story is provided as-is, and the views expressed belong solely to the characters.