Then she heard it.
A sound that didn’t belong.
It was faint. Weak. Like someone trying to breathe through something tight and suffocating.
Lupita froze.
The landfill was never quiet—machines roared, dogs barked, people shouted—but this sound cut through all of it. It wasn’t noise.
It was life.
And it was afraid.
Slowly, carefully, she followed it. Around a pile of broken furniture. Past a stack of doors and cabinets. Until she found it.
A rusted refrigerator, thrown on its side.
It was tied shut with thick rope.
The sound came from inside.
Lupita’s heart started pounding.
Curiosity could get you hurt. That was the first rule she had learned. But something about that sound—desperate, fragile—pulled her closer.
She crouched near the fridge and pressed her eye to a small gap.
Inside, something moved.
Then she saw it.
An eye.
Red. Swollen. Barely open.
A man.
Not like the others she saw in the dump. His clothes—though torn and filthy—had once been expensive. His face was bruised, his lips cracked.
“Please…” he whispered, his voice barely there. “Water…”
Lupita stepped back instinctively.
Her body remembered things her mind tried to forget—hands that grabbed, promises that lied, shelters that weren’t safe. Men were rarely harmless.
“Who are you?” she asked, keeping her distance.
The man swallowed painfully. “Mateo… Mateo Varela.”
The name meant nothing to her.
But his voice… it sounded like it might disappear at any second.
“Please,” he said again. “I’ve been here… too long.”
Lupita looked around.
No one nearby.
The men working metal were far down the hill. A truck was unloading on the other side. The dogs were busy fighting over scraps.