Part 2: The Parasite in the Dark
The confession hung in the humid dawn air, heavy and suffocating. Tomás Reyes stared at the weeping man before him, his knuckles white against his knees. Rage, hot and jagged, fought with a hollow sense of pity. Esteban García wasn’t a sadistic monster from a nightmare; he was a broken, ignorant man whose paralyzing fear of the system had driven him to commit a slow, unintended execution of his own flesh and blood.
“You thought it would pass?” Tomás’s voice was dangerously low, vibrating with a decade of accumulated grief. “She is seven years old, Esteban. Her body is failing. Whatever is inside her is eating her alive, and your ‘secret’ just might cost her her life.”
Esteban choked on a sob, burying his face in his dirt-caked hands. “I didn’t know… I didn’t know. The system, Officer… they don’t look at people like us to help. They look at us to find an excuse to tear us apart. If they took Lili, I knew I’d never see her again. I just wanted to protect her.”
“By letting her rot in an abandoned house?” Mariana Flores stepped forward, her voice trembling but sharp as a scalpel. She slammed her binder shut. “Your fear doesn’t absolve you, Mr. García. Because you hid from the world, we didn’t know she was drowning. Now, the law will handle you. But right now, we need to know exactly what she was exposed to. What did she eat? Where did she play? What happened in that house?”
Esteban looked up, his eyes bloodshot, wide with a sudden, primal terror. “The house… we shouldn’t have stayed there. But it was free. No rent. No papers.” He grabbed Tomás’s jacket sleeve, his grip desperate. “Officer, listen to me. There’s something wrong with that place. At night, the pipes don’t just rust—they breathe. Lili used to talk to the walls. I thought it was just an imaginary friend. I thought she was lonely because of her mother.”
Tomás yanked his arm away, his chest tightening. “‘Catch it,’” he remembered the nurse’s words. Lili’s dying whisper in the ICU. Catch what?
“We’re taking him into custody,” Tomás told Mariana, pulling out his handcuffs. “Call the precinct. Have a transport unit pick him up. I’m going back to the hospital. Dr. Velázquez needs to hear this.”
The Clock is Ticking
Back at San Miguel General Hospital, the atmosphere had shifted from chaotic to clinical dread. The sterile scent of antiseptic couldn’t mask the underlying tension. When Tomás arrived, he found Dr. Cassandra Velázquez standing outside the glass partition of the pediatric ICU, staring at the monitors with a look of profound disbelief.
The digital readouts were a mess of spiking red lines. Lili’s heart rate was climbing, but her blood pressure was cratering. Inside the room, the little girl looked even smaller, swallowed by the massive array of tubes, ventilators, and sensors attached to her fragile body. But it was her abdomen that drew the eye—it seemed even larger now, the skin stretched so taut it looked translucent, revealing a terrifying web of dark, pulsing veins.
“What do the scans show?” Tomás asked, stepping up beside the doctor.
Dr. Velázquez didn’t look at him. She just tapped a manila folder against the counter. “We ran a contrast CT and a targeted ultrasound. Officer Reyes… I’ve spent nearly two decades dealing with tumors, teratomas, and rare congenital abnormalities. What is inside Lilia García defies every textbook printed in the last century.”
She opened the folder and slid out a series of black-and-white imaging sheets. She pointed a trembling pen at the center of Lili’s pelvic and abdominal cavity.
“A normal tumor is a mass of chaotic, unorganized cells,” Cassandra explained, her voice dropping to a harsh whisper. “But look at this. These aren’t chaotic cells. Do you see these dark, linear shadows radiating outward? Those are independent vascular pathways. Whatever this thing is, it hasn’t just grown inside her; it has actively engineered its own circulatory system. It is tapping directly into her abdominal aorta and her hepatic portal vein.”
Tomás squinted at the image. The mass didn’t look round like a typical tumor. It had segmented ridges, looking almost like a tightly coiled fist, or worse, a fetal position that wasn’t human. “You said it’s damaging her organs.”
“It’s doing more than that. It’s consuming them,” Cassandra said grimly. “It is absorbing her nutrients at a rate that is physically impossible. Her muscle tissue is wasting away because this… this parasite is hogging every milligram of glucose and oxygen. And there’s something else. Look at the density readings.”
She brought up a second digital scan on a nearby monitor. “The outer shell of the mass is calcifying. It’s hardening into a protective carapace. Like an egg, or a cocoon. And the internal temperature of her core is spiking to 104 degrees Fahrenheit. Her body is trying to burn it out with a fever, but it’s not working. The heat is only accelerating the growth.”
“Her father said she talked to the walls,” Tomás murmured, the hairs on his arms standing up. “He said the house on Alamo Street was toxic. Could it be a biological pathogen? Mold? Some kind of chemical waste left behind by the gangs?”
“We’ve drawn blood cultures, bone marrow, spinal fluid,” Cassandra said, shaking her head. “Nothing matches. But the girl’s white blood cell count is practically zero. Her immune system isn’t fighting this thing. It’s acting as if the mass belongs there. As if her body has accepted it as a part of her own anatomy.”
Suddenly, a sharp, piercing alarm shattered the conversation.
Inside the ICU, Lili’s body began to violently convulse.
Emergency Intervention
“Seizure!” a nurse yelled, throwing open the glass doors.
Dr. Velázquez vaulted into action, Tomás trailing right behind her despite hospital protocol. The room became a blur of frantic hands and shouting.
“Push four milligrams of Lorazepam, now!” Cassandra ordered, pinning Lili’s small shoulders to the mattress to keep her from throwing herself off the bed.
The little girl’s eyes were wide open, but they weren’t focused on the ceiling. They were rolled back so far that only the bloodshot whites were visible. Her tiny jaw was clamped shut so hard that blood began to seep from her gums, trickling down the side of her pale cheek.
But the most horrifying spectacle was her stomach.