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Hay Paraiso — Sin Senos No

Albeiro laughed, but he kept watching. A week later, he sent her a gift: a voucher for a clinic in Bogotá. The procedure was called breast augmentation. Silicone. Four hundred cubic centimeters.

When Albeiro took her to a party at Don Chalo’s mansion, she saw Ximena in person. The famous woman’s smile was a crack in a porcelain mask. Her eyes had the flat look of a hostage. Ximena pulled Catalina into a bathroom tiled entirely in gold. Sin Senos no hay Paraiso

She took a deep breath, turned away from the mirror, and opened a textbook. Biology. She had decided to become a nurse. It was not paradise. It was not the cover of a magazine. But when she walked down the street now, men did not turn their heads, and for the first time in her life, Catalina Santana felt completely, terrifyingly, wonderfully free. Albeiro laughed, but he kept watching

Her mother, Hilda, worked double shifts at the textile factory. Her fingers were raw from thread, her back curved like a question mark. “Study, mija,” she would say, pushing a worn textbook across the table. “That is your escape.” Silicone

“Run,” Ximena whispered, gripping her wrist. “Run before the first bruise. Before the first time he holds a gun to your mother’s head.”

“I want a way out,” Catalina replied.

“You pay later,” the clinic’s receptionist said with a knowing smile.