Dust motes danced in the pale light over the crates of serrano peppers, each one worth exactly a kilo this morning. Martha didn’t look at the peppers; she looked at the vibration in her apron pocket. It was in the Toluca market, and the air was still thick with the smell of damp concrete and diesel exhaust from the unloading trucks.
She pulled out a phone with a cracked screen-a spiderweb of glass that she had learned to read like braille. There it was. An invitation to a group chat called “Crédito Inmediato Soluciones.” There were 118 participants, most of them with profile pictures of flowers or children or nothing at all. Before she could even block the number, a message appeared: “Loan approved. 5000 pesos. No Buró. No paperwork. Reply YES to receive in 8 minutes.”
I spent my morning testing pens. I have 8 of them on my desk right now-fine liners, ballpoints, a fountain pen that leaks if you look at it sideways-and I scribbled loops on a yellow legal pad until I was sure which one wouldn’t fail me during a mediation session later today. As a conflict resolution mediator, I am obsessed with things that don’t fail. Reliability is my religion because I spend my professional life swimming in the wreckage of