That Sunday morning in Barcelona began with a warm golden sunlight spilling across the balconies of the old city. Red geraniums hung from iron railings, and the breeze carried the smell of saltwater and fresh coffee drifting through narrow streets.
But for Adrian Valdez, the world had lost its color exactly one year earlier.
Once, Adrian had been known as one of the most powerful businessmen in the region. People greeted him with admiration, even fear. His name opened doors and closed million-dollar deals.
Now he looked like a ghost inside a wrinkled gray suit.
His hands—once steady enough to sign contracts worth fortunes—trembled as he pressed tape against a rough stone wall near the central plaza.
Another poster.
Another plea.
The photograph showed a smiling eight-year-old boy with bright eyes and a small gap between his teeth.
Lucas Valdez — MISSING
Pedestrians passed without stopping. Some glanced briefly and looked away, uncomfortable with another person’s tragedy. Others simply hurried by, absorbed in their own lives.
Adrian smoothed the poster against the wall.
“Where are you, son?” he whispered, his voice cracking beneath the distant sound of a passing tram and the laughter of tourists.
A black sedan waited a short distance away. His driver watched silently, a mix of pity and respect in his eyes.
He knew his employer hadn’t slept more than a few hours in months.
The Valdez mansion—once full of celebrations and music—had become silent since the day Lucas vanished from a public park during a brief moment of distraction.
“Today we search the southern districts,” Adrian said as he climbed into the car. His voice sounded hollow. “Someone must know something. A child can’t just disappear.”
Soon the sleek car left the elegant boulevards behind and entered neighborhoods where cracked sidewalks replaced polished streets and laundry hung between buildings like colorful flags.
Adrian stepped out at a random corner.
The air smelled different here—stew simmering in kitchens, damp concrete, and the sweat of long days of work.
He walked for hours.
Poster after poster.
Wall after wall.
Every time the tape stuck to his fingers or the wind ripped a poster loose, it felt like another piece of his heart tearing apart.
Finally, exhausted, he collapsed onto a stone bench.
Maybe everyone else was right, he thought.
Maybe it was time to stop searching… to accept the unthinkable.