Caracortada -
On the other side of the scar lives the ghost of who he might have been. The Caracortada at three in the morning, alone in a rented mansion with marble floors that are too cold for his bare feet. He stares into a mirror, tracing the ridge of the scar with a fingertip. He remembers the machete, the broken bottle, the knife—whatever instrument of chaos wrote this story on his flesh. And for a fleeting moment, he feels not power, but pain. The scar aches when it rains. It aches when he sees a father playing with a son in a plaza. It aches with the knowledge that he will never be loved—only feared.
In the lexicon of the street, a nickname is rarely a compliment. It is a verdict. Caracortada —"Cut Face"—is not a name you choose. It is a name you earn in a flash of mirrored steel, baptized in blood and adrenaline, and then carry for the rest of your life, whether you live five more minutes or fifty more years. Caracortada
On one side lives the man he was forced to become: ruthless, calculating, a solver of problems with a .38 special. He is the one who collects debts in blood, who sits at the head of a table littered with cocaine residue and shell casings. He understands the brutal arithmetic of the underworld: respect minus mercy equals power. On the other side of the scar lives
But the tragedy of Caracortada is that the scar does not only cut the face. It cuts the soul in two. He remembers the machete, the broken bottle, the