I was holding my daughter’s grave in grief when a voice behind me whispered, “Dad… they’re already talking about your funeral.”

The chill of the stone seeping through my knees was the only proof I was still alive. Everything else—sound, color, time—felt distant, blurred, as if the world had stepped back and left me alone with my grief.

Panteón Jardín stretched out around me in solemn rows, cypress trees standing like silent witnesses beneath a low, colorless sky. The air smelled of damp earth and old flowers. I could hear myself breathing, harsh and uneven, each breath scraping my chest raw.

My name is Joaquín Herrera Montoya. Two months ago, I believed my life was complete. Not perfect—but full. I had built companies from nothing, commanded respect, controlled outcomes. None of it mattered compared to one thing: my daughter, Isabel. Eight years old. Curious, stubborn, endlessly gentle. She became my entire world after her mother died, the reason I woke up every morning and believed the future was still worth chasing.

Now I was kneeling in front of a slab of gray marble engraved with words I still refused to accept:

Isabel Herrera — Rest in Peace.

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