Chapter 1
The tricycle rattled along the narrow road leading uphill, its engine coughing now and then as though it, too, was tired from the day’s work. Elena held onto the side bar, her hair flying freely in the evening breeze. The houses they passed were familiar yet new—painted in brighter colors, some with little sari-sari stores out front, others with children perched on porches, waving at neighbors as though everyone belonged to one extended family.
When the tricycle finally stopped in front of their home, Elena felt her heart swell. The small house, painted a faded cream with blue shutters, looked exactly as she remembered. A guava tree leaned against one side, its branches heavy with fruit, and the bamboo fence creaked softly as the wind passed through. From inside, she could already hear a familiar voice.
“Elena!”
Before she could even step through the door, her younger brother Mateo came rushing out, nearly tripping over his slippers. He was taller than she remembered, his lanky arms stretched wide as he pulled her into a hug. His notebook fell to the ground in his haste, a pencil rolling away across the floor.
“You’re back!” he exclaimed, his grin wide and bright.
Elena laughed, hugging him tightly. “I told you I’d come home after graduation.” She stepped back, looking at him in disbelief. “Mateo, you’ve grown so much. You’re almost taller than me now!”
He puffed his chest proudly. “Give it a year, Ate, and I’ll definitely be taller.”
Their mother chuckled behind them. “This boy eats like there’s no tomorrow. Don’t be surprised.”
Elena bent down to pick up his notebook. She flipped through the pages and saw dozens of sketches—cartoon characters, landscapes, even portraits of neighbors. “You’ve been busy,” she said, admiration soft in her voice. “These are good, Mateo.”
Mateo shrugged, though his cheeks flushed with pride. “It’s just for fun.”
She ruffled his hair. “That’s what you always say. But don’t be surprised if one day people call you an artist.”
Inside, the familiar scent of home wrapped around Elena—wood smoke, the faint saltiness carried in from the sea, and the warm, comforting aroma of garlic sizzling in oil. The living room was modest, with wooden chairs polished from years of use, and family photos hanging slightly crooked on the wall.
The dining table was already set: grilled fish glistening with calamansi, steaming white rice, a bowl of munggo stew, and slices of golden mango on a plate. Elena’s stomach growled at the sight, and her mother chuckled.
“See? I told you the city didn’t feed you well,” her mother teased as they all sat down.
“This looks amazing,” Elena admitted, picking up her spoon. “You don’t know how much I missed food like this. In the city, I mostly ate noodles or whatever I could afford near the campus.”
Mateo gasped dramatically. “Ate, how could you survive without real food? No wonder you’re so thin!”
Elena threw him a playful glare. “Excuse me, I did survive. And I graduated, didn’t I?”
Her mother smiled proudly. “We’re so proud of you, anak. You worked hard.” She placed a generous scoop of munggo onto Elena’s plate. “But now that you’re home, you’ll regain your strength. San Felipe will heal whatever the city took away.”
Elena’s chest tightened with emotion. She blinked quickly, focusing on her rice before her eyes betrayed her. Home wasn’t just a place—it was a feeling, a rhythm she had missed in the noise of the city.
Over dinner, they shared stories. Mateo animatedly talked about the basketball games he played with friends and how he nearly won first place in a school art contest. Their mother chimed in with news about neighbors—who had married, who had left for Manila to work, and who had just opened a new eatery near the market.
“And you, anak?” her mother asked between bites. “How was life in the city?”
Elena hesitated. How could she explain it? The city was thrilling, yes, but also overwhelming. The nights were filled with neon lights and car horns instead of stars and crickets. She had studied literature, drowned herself in books and theories, but sometimes she had felt lost among the crowd—just another face rushing to catch a jeepney, just another student across the table and squeezed her hand. “And now you’re back. That’s what matters.”
After dinner, Mateo eagerly showed Elena his latest drawings, spreading them across the floor like a makeshift gallery. She sat cross-legged, studying each one. His lines were rough but full of imagination—heroes with capes, classmates captured mid-laugh, and even a sketch of their guava tree.
“You have an eye for detail,” Elena told him. “You notice things other people might miss.”
He shrugged again, but his smile betrayed his happiness at her praise. “Maybe. But I’m not like you, Ate. You can make whole worlds with your words.”
Elena shook her head. “Words and drawings aren’t so different. They both tell stories.”
Her gaze lingered on one particular sketch—a rough outline of the community library, the same building she had seen earlier. She blinked. “Mateo, did you draw this today?”
He scratched his head. “No, last week. I passed by while they were fixing it. Ate, did you know some architect is helping rebuild it? I saw him once, sitting on the steps with his sketchbook.”
Elena’s heart skipped. She remembered the man she had noticed earlier—the way he bent over his sketchpad, as though the world around him didn’t exist.
She smiled faintly, not ready to admit her curiosity aloud. “I think I might’ve seen him too.”
That night, when the house was quiet and her family asleep, Elena stepped out onto the porch. The stars above were brighter than she remembered, scattered across the sky like glittering secrets. The waves crashed faintly in the distance, steady and comforting.
She hugged her notebook to her chest. For the first time in a long while, her heart felt light.
“Home,” she whispered, the word like a prayer.
Yet in the stillness of the night, she couldn’t shake the thought of the man with the sketchbook. A stranger, yes—but somehow, she felt he might not remain a stranger for long.