Part One: Santiago
He arrived on a Tuesday, at 4:17 in the morning, in the way that most important things arrive — without ceremony, without the preparation you believed you had made, in a rush of noise and effort and then, suddenly, quiet.

Miguel Torres had been in the delivery room the entire time. He had held Valeria’s hand through eleven hours of labor, had said the things you say — you’re doing so well, I’m here, I’ve got you — which felt inadequate in the moment and which she told him later were exactly right, that the words had mattered less than the fact of his hand, warm and present, in hers. He had watched the doctor and the nurse and had tried to be useful and had mostly stayed out of the way, which was, he understood, the appropriate version of useful in that situation.
And then Santiago was there.
Small, furious, red-faced, making his opinion of the world known in a voice that seemed too large for a body that fit in the crook of Miguel’s arm. Miguel held him for the first time and felt — he had tried to describe this afterward and had never found adequate language for it — not the rush of joy he had expected from movies and from the accounts of other fathers, but something quieter and more fundamental. A rearrangement. As if some internal architecture that had been assembled in a particular configuration for thirty-four years had just been rebuilt, quietly and permanently, around a new central fact.