
The billionaire’s son suffered from pains that no doctor could explain, and each new diagnosis seemed more expensive than the last.codm
In a house where everything could be bought, relief had become the only impossible luxury.
The Villalba mansion stood on a private hill on the outskirts of Madrid, protected by high walls and discreet cameras.
From the outside it looked like a fortress of success, but inside there was constant tension, as if every corridor hid an uncomfortable whisper.
Nine-year-old Tomás Villalba was the heir to a technological empire that moved millions every quarter.
But at night he was not heir to anything, he was just a child writhing in pain, holding his head with trembling hands.
The doctors spoke of childhood migraines, stress, hypersensitivity, and even suggested that the child was “somatizing” expectations.
That word landed like an accusation disguised as science.
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