Alejandro had been gone for almost twenty-four hours.
To anyone else, that might have meant very little. But Lucía knew him too well. He was not the kind of man who disappeared unless he was arranging something—something polished, calculated, and usually dangerous for the person standing in his way.
Carmen Ruiz noticed the shift before anyone said it aloud.
After a quiet change to Lucía’s treatment plan, the numbers began to move in the wrong direction for Alejandro—but in exactly the right direction for Lucía. The liver values that had been climbing toward catastrophe were now beginning to stabilize. The improvement was not dramatic, not the sort of thing that would make headlines on a monitor, but it was enough to destroy the earlier certainty that Lucía had “no more than three days.”
The attending doctor stood staring at the chart with a frown.
“This doesn’t make sense,” he muttered. “If the damage were truly irreversible, we wouldn’t be seeing this kind of response.”
Carmen turned toward Lucía, and Lucía met her eyes.
Neither woman said much.
They did not need to.
The pattern had begun to reveal itself.
Alejandro returned the following day looking exactly like the version of himself he had spent years perfecting—impeccably dressed, smelling faintly of expensive cologne, wearing concern like a tailored suit. He approached the nurses’ station with controlled urgency, every gesture measured for effect.
“How is she?” he asked.
“Stable,” Carmen replied.
It was only a single word, but Lucía saw what it did to him when he stepped into her room a few moments later. There, beneath his smooth expression, was the smallest tightening in his jaw. Most people would have missed it.
Lucía did not.
“Love…” he said gently, moving closer to her bed. “You look pale.”
Lucía let her eyes remain half-lidded, her breathing shallow and tired.
“I’m tired,” she murmured.
He leaned in slightly, lowering his voice.
“I’ve already spoken to the lawyer. Just as a precaution. In case things… worsen.”
That made her open her eyes fully.
She looked at him with a calmness that unsettled him more than any accusation could have.
“Always thinking ahead,” she said softly.
For just one second, his composure cracked.
“I’m only protecting what’s ours.”
Lucía repeated the word quietly, almost as if tasting it.
“Ours?”
Before he could answer, Carmen entered with a tray. Alejandro stepped back, but not before his eyes drifted toward the IV pump. Carmen noticed immediately.
“Please don’t touch the equipment,” she said.
He straightened. “Relax.”
But the tension had already thickened the room.
Later that same afternoon, Alejandro was called into the medical director’s office.
The doctor sat across from him, calm and formal.
“Mr. Martinez, we’ve identified irregularities in certain medication orders.”
Alejandro frowned. “Irregularities?”
“Several drugs were approved that are not typically indicated for this diagnosis. The authorizations carry your signature.”
For the first time, his expression sharpened in a way that looked less concerned and more defensive.