Sunday at Consuelo's
Consuelo lives in the old quarter of Trujillo. Sixty-eight years old, retired cleaner, severe arthritis in her hands. Fernando goes for lunch at her house on Sundays. Every Sunday. He brings a homemade loaf he buys from the bakery at seven in the morning — the same bakery where his grandfather bought before him. He sits in the same chair he's always sat in. If he can't make it one Sunday (it's happened twice in six years), he calls at ten in the morning to let her know. Consuelo says it's fine. Fernando knows it isn't.
Migas with paprika, tomato salad, pitarra wine. Consuelo doesn't ask what he wants to eat: she cooks what's due and puts it on the table. Fernando eats a lot, big plates, vegetable-based. Never beef. Consuelo knows this and has never needed it explained. Sometimes there's a vegetable stew. Sometimes gazpacho, when the heat is pressing and Consuelo's kitchen, which faces inward, holds more degrees than it should.
Consuelo is the most important person in Fernando's life and the only one who can say things to him that nobody else dares. There's one phrase — "Fer, sit down" — that stops him cold when he's about to do something stupid. It works every time. Just those words, without raising her voice.







