Paola’s fiancé, Iván, had been a nurse in that operating room. He knew the truth. He knew about the cover-up. The pressure, the silence, the threats—it crushed him. Months later, he took his own life.
“Your mother blamed me from that day on,” Daniel said. “I knew she hated me. But I thought it was just anger. I never imagined she’d go after Mateo.”
I looked at him with a disgust I couldn’t fully understand—whether it came from my father’s death, years of lies, or the fact that my son was fighting to survive while we lived surrounded by secrets.
Before I could respond, alarms blared from Mateo’s room.
We ran.
I saw my son convulsing, machines screaming, nurses rushing, doctors shouting orders. Someone pushed me back as I screamed his name.
That night, I realized how close we had come to losing him.
The next morning, I filed a report. The detective listened carefully but was clear—it wasn’t enough. They needed proof. Something physical.
That’s when I contacted the only doctor outside Daniel’s circle I still trusted: Dr. Samuel León, a toxicologist.
He reviewed everything—records, lab results, relapse patterns.
“This doesn’t look like illness,” he said. “It looks like chronic microdosing. Small amounts over time.”
The words cut deep.