My husband has a good job, and because of that we live in a bright, spacious apartment high above the city. From our windows we can see the skyline, the evening lights, and the tiny puzzle of cars far below. Twice a week, a house cleaner comes to our home. She is a quiet woman, always neat, always polite, moving through the rooms like a soft shadow.
She dusts the shelves, straightens the cushions, wipes the glass until it shines. She folds our laundry with the kind of care I only remember from my grandmother. She always greets me with a gentle “Good morning,” then quietly gets to work. To me, she was simply “the cleaning lady,” part of the rhythm of our comfortable life.
Then, one ordinary afternoon, that changed. Continue reading…