The smell began three months into that new distance.
At first you wondered if it came from his luggage. Then from his shoes. Then from something in the closet. But no matter what you checked, the smell always concentrated in one place. His side of the bed. Deep, low, embedded.
One night, around two in the morning, you woke with your heart racing.
The room was dark except for the orange slit of streetlight leaking through the blinds. Miguel snored beside you, one arm flung across his chest. The smell was so strong you actually gagged. Not dramatically. Not in some theatrical rush. Just a sudden involuntary spasm of the throat that made your eyes water.
You got out of bed and stood there in the dark, pressing your hand over your mouth.
It smelled like damp plastic, rot, mildew, and something else underneath. Something metallic and sour. Something hidden too long.
Miguel stirred. “What are you doing?”
“I can’t breathe in here.”
He rolled toward you, his face shadowed and unreadable. “Ana. Go back to sleep.”
“There is something wrong with this bed.”
“No, there isn’t.”
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