They were talking about Mateo.
My stomach twisted. I couldn’t breathe. And then came the worst part.
“All that’s left is to add the usual mixture to the soup,” my mother murmured. “After that, we leave it in God’s hands.”
I covered my mouth to keep from making a sound. My whole body shook uncontrollably. My own mother. My own sister. My own child.
For eleven months, Mateo had been going in and out of the hospital. Some days he was fine—building toy cars, arguing about homework, laughing at cartoons. Then suddenly, he’d crash again: high fever, pain, vomiting, exhaustion. Doctors called it “an unclear condition.” They ran every test imaginable—bloodwork, scans, allergy panels, digestive studies. Nothing explained it.
And I was falling apart.
Daniel, a surgeon at the same hospital, kept asking me to stay calm. He said we couldn’t jump to conclusions. But no mother can stay calm while watching her child slowly fade.
I backed away slowly, still recording, and left the house without thinking. I don’t remember shutting the door. I only remember driving through the rain in Guadalajara, replaying the recording over and over while gripping the steering wheel so tightly my hands burned.
At the hospital, I went straight to Mateo’s room. Daniel looked up immediately.
“What happened? You look—”
“Come with me. Now.”
In the hallway, I played the audio.
Daniel listened without speaking. First confusion crossed his face. Then shock. Then his color drained. He leaned against the wall as if he couldn’t stand.
“No… that’s not possible,” he whispered.