The Worker Everyone Spoiled Was Being Prepared For The Concrete-xurixuri

Toño did not go to the tower in Naucalpan because he wanted a career in construction. He went because a debt of $48,000 pesos had started to sound louder than pride inside his small house in Ecatepec.

His daughter was three years old. At night, she slept with one hand curled under her cheek while Toño and his wife counted what was left for diapers, food, and the electricity bill.

So when a cousin mentioned a site that paid cash and asked fewer questions than most, Toño went. He told himself hard work was cleaner than begging, even if the place felt wrong from the first morning.

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At 6:20 a.m., the air around the tower tasted like dust. Cement powder stuck to sweat. Warm metal burned through gloves. Somewhere near the cafeteria, beans reheated until the smell mixed with beer and diesel.

That was where Toño first noticed Beto. Not because Beto worked hard, but because he did not. He arrived late, laughed too loudly, hid in bathrooms, smoked beside the drums, and abandoned buckets halfway.

Any other man would have been fired. Beto was fed. He was handed tortas, caguamas, and permissions that made the rest of the crew lower their eyes.

The engineer, Salgado, watched him like a man checking a mark on a list. He smiled whenever Beto stumbled near the mixer, and the foreman repeated the same phrase: “That one already has his spot reserved.”

Tacho, the oldest master worker there, told Toño not to ask questions. He said it gently, but the warning sat heavy. “Here, the one who survives is the one who keeps quiet, son.”

Toño tried to follow that rule. He needed the money. He had a daughter, a debt, and no room for heroics. But the way everyone treated Beto made silence feel less like wisdom and more like permission.

One afternoon at 4:15, Toño found Beto asleep on sacks with an open Corona beside his helmet. The foreman laughed and said, “Let him rest. Tomorrow he’s going to work full-time.”

Toño asked the question before he could stop himself. Why did they tolerate Beto? Why did the laziest man on the site get protected while everyone else was disposable?

Tacho dragged him into the tool room and shut the door. The light buzzed overhead. Dust floated over wrenches and broken drill bits. Tacho’s hands shook when he spoke.

“They’re not taking care of him,” the old man whispered. “They’re getting him drunk so they can leave him inside the concrete.”

Toño laughed from nerves. Tacho did not smile. He explained that old stories moved through construction sites like bad smoke: lonely men, drunk men, men with no one to search quickly, disappearing during a big pour.

“They give him food, booze, trust,” Tacho said. “Then the concrete covers everything.”

The next day, Engineer Salgado patted Beto’s back and told him the site knew how to keep secrets. Beto, drunk and red-eyed, asked if that meant he was important. Salgado said, “More than you imagine.”

Five days before delivery, Beto disappeared. The foreman claimed he had gone drinking with a woman. Nobody filed a report. Nobody called family. Nobody even pretended to look beyond the gate.

That night, the crew was sent to the basement. It was the last blind wall, the closed formwork, the kind of pour where everything vanished behind wood, steel, and pressure.

The pump started coughing concrete. Thick gray weight moved through the hose and into the hidden cavity. The machine swallowed voices, footsteps, fear. Toño kept glancing at Tacho, whose face had gone pale.

Then came the first knock.

Tac.

Every man heard it. Some pretended they had not. Then two more knocks sounded from inside the wall, sharper and more desperate. Tac. Tac.

Tacho dropped his shovel. A worker froze with a bucket tilted in his hand. Another stared down at his boots as if the floor might excuse him. The pump kept groaning.

Nobody moved.

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