Pilar’s shop, Matrices De Bordados Gratis , had not sold a single matrix in a decade. Her grandson, Mateo, begged her to throw them away. "Gratis? You give them for free and still no one comes," he said.
That night, Pilar taught her how to lay the matrix on velvet, how to rub chalk through the perforations, how to follow the ghost-dots with a needle. The rabbit-moon bloomed under Luna’s hands—silver thread, then black, then a single red stitch for the heart of the rabbit.
She pulled out a matrix from 1923—a crescent moon with a rabbit’s face carved into the negative space. "From a nun in Cádiz," she said. "She believed the moon was not a circle, but a bite."