Elias kept his job. But he never sprayed another can of paint without first pulling up the safety data sheet on his phone, reading every section, and checking the batch number against the manufacturer’s current file. And every time a new worker asked him why he was so paranoid, he handed them a laminated copy of the Midnight Blue MSDS — the one with the red note — and said, “This is why. Read it. Then read yours.”
Elias read that sentence seven times. Then he looked at the pallet of 240 cans. Each can contained about 400 milliliters of liquid propellant, solvent, pigment, and binder. And each can, according to Lina’s note, contained a tiny excess of hexamethylene diisocyanate — a compound so reactive that it could permanently alter the proteins in human lung tissue after a single heavy exposure.
Then he noticed something else. The MSDS in his hand — the one with the red note — was dated February 14th. The online version was dated March 1st. Between those dates, Asmaco had quietly changed the document. Section 15 (Regulatory Information) had been expanded with a new line: “This product does not contain isocyanates above the notification threshold of 0.1% w/w.” But the red note said 0.23% above spec. That meant total isocyanate content around 0.33% — three times the claimed limit.





















