He spent years learning not to feel anything. The young man on the asphalt undid that in thirty seconds.
Ant nio Guerra is thirty years old, a Lieutenant Colonel, and the sole occupant of an apartment built for a life he never got around to living. He came back from Afghanistan with the same face and a different soul. His soldiers are afraid of him. He prefers it that way - it's simpler than explaining what happens when someone gets too close.
Miguel In cio is twenty-five, a supermarket cashier, and the sole guardian of a three-year-old boy who has called him Daddy since he learned to speak. When their mother died, Miguel simply chose the child - surrendered his twenties, his relationships, every version of himself that existed only for himself. He doesn't regret a breath of it.
They were never supposed to meet.
But on an ordinary afternoon, Miguel runs toward a hospital - heart in his throat, his brother's name on his lips - and doesn't see the car.
The car was Ant nio's.
What begins as guilt becomes presence. Presence becomes care. Care becomes something neither of them knows how to name - and that both of them are terrified of losing before they ever admit it exists.