MADRID (Reuters) - Thirty-one-year-old Ines Alcolea ditched the bustling life of Madrid in October for a village near the much quieter medieval town of Toledo, unable to face the prospect of more COVID-19 restrictions in her small flat in the Spanish capital.
"At least here, if there's another lockdown we'll have more space, a garden. It'll be lighter," Alcolea said, sitting in her new home surrounded by boxes and her two cats.
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