Althea Reyes grew up in a house where the walls were thin and dreams had to be strong.
Their home stood near the shore, where the scent of saltwater clung to everything — clothes, hair, even hope. Her father left before sunrise to fish, and her mother sold homemade snacks in the afternoon heat. They worked hard, but money still slipped through their fingers like sand.
Althea learned early how to read silence.
She knew when the electricity bill was overdue. She knew when rice had to be rationed. She knew that when her mother said, “We’re okay,” it really meant, “We’ll survive.”
One evening, at just ten years old, she overheard her parents whispering about debt. Her father sounded defeated. Her mother tried to sound brave.
That was the night Althea made a decision.
She would grow up differently.
Not ungrateful. Not ashamed.
Just determined.
In school, she studied like her future depended on it — because it did. She helped neighbors for small pay. Saved coins in an old jar under her bed. Every peso meant progress.
At nineteen, she left home with one suitcase and bus fare her parents could barely afford.
The city was overwhelming — loud streets, impatient strangers, opportunities hidden behind experience she didn’t yet have. She started as a*****e assistant, standing for hours, memorizing prices, handling complaints with steady hands.
She didn’t complain.
She observed.
She improved.
She volunteered for extra tasks. Learned systems. Asked questions others were too shy to ask.
Promotion didn’t come quickly, but it came honestly.
Althea wasn’t chasing luxury.
She was chasing stability.
And somewhere between long shifts and silent prayers, she felt something shift inside her.
She was no longer just surviving.
She was building.
She didn’t know it yet, but her heart — so focused on ambition — was about to meet someone who would challenge her in ways success never could.