Roberto was what people would call a good man. He didn’t drink excessively, didn’t gamble, came home every night. On weekends, he took the kids to the park, helped Patricia with groceries, watched soccer with the neighbors. He was the kind of father who attended school meetings, who carefully saved a little money every month for the annual family vacation to Acapulco, who dreamed of someday being able to pay for his children’s university education.
His coworkers described him as serious but kind, meticulous with numbers, always punctual, never causing trouble. Life in Lindavista during those years was typical of working-class neighborhoods in Mexico City. The streets were always full of street vendors, the sound of garbage trucks mixing with the bells of sweet potato carts in the afternoons.
The Campos family lived in a two-story house with a red brick façade and a small garden in front that Patricia tended carefully, planting geraniums and bougainvillea that added color to the street. Neighbors knew one another, borrowed sugar when needed, watched each other’s children, and gossiped on street corners on Sundays after mass.
But beneath this appearance of normalcy, Roberto Campos carried a secret that was eating him alive—a secret that neither Patricia, nor his children, nor anyone close to him suspected. And that secret was about to explode in the most devastating way possible.
Tuesday, August 22, 2006, appeared to be an ordinary day. Mexico City woke up under its characteristic late-summer gray sky, when afternoon rain is almost predictable. Roberto got up at 6:00 a.m. as usual. Patricia heard him moving in the bathroom, the sound of the shower, his footsteps in the hallway. They had breakfast together as always—coffee and sweet bread—while the children were still asleep.
Daniel was 10 years old and Alejandro was 7. School had started just two weeks earlier. Patricia would later remember every detail of that morning with painful clarity. Roberto seemed distracted, quieter than usual, but she attributed it to work stress. The company was undergoing an external audit, and Roberto had mentioned that he was overloaded with work.
He was wearing a long-sleeved white shirt, gray dress pants, and freshly polished black shoes. His brown faux-leather briefcase—the same one he had used for years—waited by the door.
“Are you okay?” Patricia asked as she poured him more coffee.
Roberto looked up and smiled at her in that way that always made her feel safe.
“Yes, my love. Just tired. Nothing a good coffee can’t fix.”
He kissed her on the forehead—a routine gesture she had received thousands of times, but one that would later take on a heartbreaking meaning. He went upstairs to wake the children, helped them get dressed, and prepared their lunches for school.
Daniel had a math test and was nervous. Roberto sat with him for a few minutes, reviewing fraction problems with the calm patience that defined his fatherhood.
At 7:30 a.m., Roberto picked up his briefcase, said goodbye to the children as they finished their cereal, and left the house. Patricia watched him walk down the street toward Montevideo Avenue, where he would catch the microbus to the subway. The sky threatened rain.
That was the last image she had of him: his back slightly hunched under the weight of his briefcase, walking among other workers heading to their jobs, disappearing into the human current of a city that never sleeps.
Roberto never arrived at work that day.
At 10:00 a.m., his boss called the house asking for him. That was completely unusual—Roberto was obsessively punctual. Patricia felt the first sharp stab of worry. She called Roberto’s cellphone, but it was turned off. That was strange. Roberto always kept his phone on in case his family needed him.
She waited, thinking maybe there had been a transportation issue, that microbuses were unpredictable, that the subway sometimes stopped between stations.
But when noon came and Roberto had still given no sign of life, worry turned into alarm.
Patricia called the company again. No, he hadn’t arrived. He hadn’t called. She called the few relatives they had in the city. No one knew anything.
At 2:00 p.m., she left the children with a neighbor and went out to look for him, retracing the route Roberto took every day. She asked at corner stores, spoke to street vendors who were always in the same spots. No one remembered seeing him that morning.
It was as if Roberto Campos had dissolved into the air.
That same afternoon, Patricia filed a missing person report at the public prosecutor’s office in Gustavo A. Madero. The officer who took her report—a middle-aged man with a tired look—handled it with a mix of routine and skepticism that Patricia found unsettling.
“Ma’am, many men leave for a few days and come back when they cool off or run out of money.”
Patricia insisted that Roberto wasn’t like that, that something terrible must have happened. The officer sighed, filled out the forms, and gave her a case number. She was told to wait 72 hours before it would be considered an official disappearance requiring active investigation.
Those 72 hours were an eternity.
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