It was what filled him with the greatest pride. Feats are for eagles, he thought as he wiped away his tears. He had always wanted to write that book. Shared values were what brought Alexandre, Ronald, and Ricardo together. He smiled, thinking that the one resurrected from the dead was the first cause, an exceptional mind behind an exceptional feat by an exceptional group. He was part of it. The most beautiful thing: he would remain anonymous. If anyone doubted it, no one could prove otherwise. After all, he was God.
Arturo was hospitalized when President MacDoe denounced electoral fraud. The events at the Buenos Aires hospital were rare, atypical, strange, suspicious, just like the elections in the United States. Without explanation, a substitute doctor appeared with two substitute nurses and insisted on a brain scan. The scan detected a hematoma. He was rushed into surgery, and his skull was opened. Unusual.
The surgery had been successful. He recovered at the clinic. Days later, at home, he died. It stunned everyone, like a midfield goal that caught everyone off guard. Millions posted messages online. People said, “It seems he died.” When the media confirmed it, disbelief spread. “He’ll recover. Like before,” some said. “It’s a bad joke,” said others. “Fake news. No, he can’t die.”
It was the day when Argentines and the world knew the answer to the question everyone asked when he was alive: what will happen when he is gone? No one knew, but now he was gone. Millions mourned him. In Argentina, many said he deserved a bigger funeral than Eva Perón. It would have been, but the pandemic robbed him of it.
‘Social and judicial condemnation of the guilty,’ read a flag at a massive march under the Buenos Aires Obelisk. ‘The guilty must go to prison,’ said another. ‘They killed him, but he will live in the people.’ Many banners appeared. Incidents occurred when police tried to disperse them; the government had banned large gatherings due to the pandemic.
A lawsuit accused the neurosurgeon, his primary doctor, a substitute doctor, and two nurses. The press released footage showing their disdain for him.
“We need justice. They should have cared better,” said a journalist in a prestigious network TV.
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