Nevertheless, in the final note he pointed out a hypertrophy of the liver that he attributed to a poorly cured case of hepatitis. “That is to say,” he told me, “he had only a few years of life left to him in any case.” Dr. Dionisio Iguarán, who in fact had treated Santiago Nasar for hepatitis at the age of twelve, recalled that autopsy with indignation. “Only a priest could be so dumb,” he told me. “There was never any way to make him understand that we tropical people have larger livers than greenhorn Galician Spaniards.”