“I mean Camila never died in our maternity ward.”
Every muscle in my body froze.
“They called me after everything was already over,” she continued. “Your mother requested copies of routine prenatal records months ago, claiming they were for insurance purposes. At the time, nothing seemed unusual. But when I heard about Camila’s funeral today, I checked our system.”
“And?”
“There is no death certificate issued by us.”
The room spun.
“No record of your son’s death either.”
I couldn’t breathe.
“So where is my wife?”
“I don’t know,” she whispered. “But something about this is terribly wrong.”
I hung up and stared at the navy-blue button resting in my palm.
It was no longer just a clue.
It was proof that someone had staged an entire tragedy.
I quietly slipped out the back entrance of the house before dawn and drove straight to the cemetery.
The burial wasn’t scheduled until noon.
Camila’s coffin was still inside the chapel.
The caretaker recognized me immediately.
“I’m sorry for your loss.”
“I need five minutes alone.”
He nodded.
As soon as he walked away, I unlocked the coffin.
My hands trembled as I lifted the lid.
The woman inside wasn’t Camila.
The hairstyle.
The makeup.
The flowers.
Everything had been carefully arranged.
But the face…
It wasn’t my wife.
The resemblance was close enough to fool anyone who expected to see death.
But not her husband.
My knees nearly gave out.
Someone had switched the body.
Someone wanted the world to believe Camila had disappeared forever.
I closed the coffin just as footsteps echoed outside.
Two men in dark suits entered the chapel.
One of them spoke into a phone.
“The husband isn’t here.”
I ducked behind the altar, my pulse pounding.
The second man answered quietly.
“Mrs. Armenta wants the cremation done today. No delays.”
Cremation.
They were destroying evidence.
I waited until they left before calling the police.
This time, I didn’t mention my suspicions.
I simply reported that I believed the wrong body had been placed in my wife’s coffin.
Within an hour, officers sealed the chapel.
My mother arrived furious.
“How dare you embarrass this family!”
I looked her in the eyes.
“Because that’s not Camila.”
For the first time in my life…
She looked afraid.
Rodrigo appeared minutes later, trying to calm everyone down.
“It’s grief,” he told the officers. “My brother isn’t thinking clearly.”
One detective quietly interrupted.
“Then perhaps you can explain why dental records don’t match.”
Rodrigo stopped talking.
The detective continued.
“And while we’re asking questions… would you also explain why one of your jacket buttons was found clenched inside the victim’s hand?”
Rodrigo instinctively looked down at his jacket.
One button was missing.
The detective noticed.
So did everyone else.
My mother’s face turned completely white.
“That’s just a coincidence,” she whispered.
“No,” the detective replied calmly.
“It rarely is.”
Both of them were taken in for questioning.
But my nightmare was only beginning.
That evening, I returned home exhausted.
As I unlocked the front gate, I noticed something taped beneath the mailbox.
A tiny envelope.
Inside was a single photograph.
Camila.
Alive.
She was sitting on a wooden bench, holding a newborn wrapped in a blue blanket.
On the back, written in her unmistakable handwriting, were six words:
Don’t trust anyone. We’re still running.
My heart nearly stopped.
She was alive.
And so was our son.
There was no address.
No explanation.
Only one more item inside the envelope.
A small brass key.
Attached to it was a faded tag with one word written across it.
Lighthouse.
I searched every property our family had ever owned until one document caught my attention.
Thirty years earlier, my late grandfather had purchased an abandoned lighthouse cottage on the coast.
Nobody had mentioned it in decades.
The next morning I drove six hours without stopping.
Rain battered the windshield as the lonely tower finally appeared through the fog.
The cottage looked abandoned.
Windows boarded.
Paint peeling.
No sign of life.
I almost turned back.
Then I noticed something hanging from the porch railing.
A tiny knitted blue sock.
The same pattern Camila had been making before I left for Monterrey.
I walked toward the front door.
It creaked open before I could knock.
Camila stood there.
Pale.
Tired.
Alive.
Tears filled both our eyes.
She was holding our son.
For several seconds, neither of us spoke.
Then she whispered the words I had dreamed of hearing.
“I knew you’d find us.”
I wrapped both of them in my arms.
For the first time in weeks, the weight crushing my chest disappeared.
But inside the cottage, sitting untouched on the kitchen table, was a thick folder stamped with one terrifying word:
Evidence.
Camila looked at it before meeting my eyes.
“They weren’t just trying to steal the vineyards,” she said quietly.
“They’ve been hiding something much bigger for years.”
“And once you read what’s inside…”
“You’ll understand why they were willing to convince the world that I was dead.”