Her name was Perla Alison, and she walked out of her home in Santa Martha Acatitla the way countless children do every afternoon: unafraid, carrying nothing but a few coins and the trust that she would be safe. That trust was shattered when hours of worry turned into days of searching, Amber Alerts, and strangers sharing her photo as if clinging to a fragile lifeline. When her body was finally found near the Constitución de 1917 metro station, in an abandoned property marked only by a stench and silence, the truth was unbearable yet familiar in a country haunted by femicides.
Now, grief has hardened into rage. Neighbors, activists, and families of other victims are demanding more than condolences and headlines. They want real protection for girls, real investigations, and real consequences. Perla’s story is no longer just hers; it has become a warning, a wound, and a vow that her name will not fade.
