ADVERTISEMENT

The afternoon I picked Mateo Herrera up from school, he leaned toward me in the back seat and whispered, “Mr. Rafael… my back hurts.” He said it so quietly it was almost lost in the sound of the door closing. But I heard him. And from that moment on, I could no longer pretend everything was alright. I was the driver who picked him up every day in front of one of the most exclusive private schools in Mexico City. Mateo was eight years old. He was the only son of Alejandro Herrera, a businessman so powerful that his name opened doors from Monterrey to Cancún. On the surface, the boy’s life seemed perfect. Impeccable uniforms. New backpacks. A black SUV always waiting for him after school. But for almost a year, I had noticed something was off. Mateo was fading away. Less laughter. Less appetite. Less light in his eyes. And no, that wasn’t the worst of it. That afternoon, he was different. He didn’t run. He didn’t greet anyone. He walked slowly, with short steps, as if the fabric of his uniform were brushing against an open wound. When he got into the car, the smell of leather and disinfectant clung to us. He looked out the window. Then he lowered his voice. “Every night,” he told me. I felt my chest tighten. “How long have you been like this?” Mateo didn’t look at me. “A long time.” I gripped the steering wheel. “Who’s hurting you?” The car fell silent. Completely silent. Only the engine idling and the boy’s ragged breathing behind me could be heard. I saw in the rearview mirror how he clenched his fists. His shoulders trembled. As if answering would be worse than the pain. That wasn’t tiredness. It was fear. I parked on an empty street, a few blocks from the mansion. I turned off the engine. The air grew heavy, still. I turned to him and said the only thing I could say at that moment. “It’s okay. I’m here with you.” Mateo hesitated for a long time. Then he lifted his shirt. And I stopped breathing. Not because I had never seen suffering. But because I had never seen anything so cruel on a child’s back. There were crisscrossing marks. Old and new. Some bruised. Others still open. Broken skin. Inflamed flesh. As if someone had unleashed their fury again and again on a body too small to defend itself. Mateo pulled his shirt down abruptly, almost begging for forgiveness. “I’m sorry… I didn’t mean to.” That broke me inside. “Listen to me carefully. You didn’t do anything wrong.” He looked at me with tears in his eyes. “But Aunt Valeria says that if I behave better… she won’t punish me.” My hands felt ice-cold. Valeria Castillo. The elegant woman who was soon to marry Alejandro Herrera. The one who smiled for the cameras. The one who spoke so sweetly of the family. The only one who was with Mateo every night, after the doors closed. “Did she do this to you?” Mateo nodded. “With what?” He swallowed before answering. “With a belt…” For a year, we all saw Valeria smile. No one asked what happened when the lights went out in that house. Silence doesn’t protect a child; it only teaches them to suffer in silence so the adults can remain comfortable. I looked away for a few seconds because if I kept watching him, I was going to lose control. I tried to compose myself. I needed to know one more thing. “Does your dad know?” Mateo shook his head. “He says that if I tell anyone… he’s going to send me far away… where no one can find me.” Eight years old. Living in fear of disappearing inside his own home. I started the engine again. The SUV silently drove toward the mansion. Mateo wasn’t crying. Neither was I. But as the black gate began to open in front of us, I understood that I had only a few seconds left to decide whether to go in there as the driver… or get out of that car as the only adult willing to destroy that lie. The story continues in the comment below. Like this comment first, then check the links 👇

ADVERTISEMENT

with which that boy believed no one would ever choose him.

I got out of the car, walked around to the SUV, and opened the door for him. Mateo got out slowly. The moment his feet touched the floor, he winced in pain, confirming what I already knew.

This hadn’t happened just once.

It had been going on for some time

We went inside together. The marble in continue reading …

ADVERTISEMENT

Leave a Comment

ADVERTISEMENT