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It felt like lightning split my chest.
Ricardo set the plate down and clasped Laura’s hands, kissing her knuckles like she was royalty.
“Be patient. If I divorce Sofia now, I lose everything. She’s smart—everything is under her name. The car, the watch, the project capital… it’s all her money.” He chuckled softly, almost admiring my usefulness. “But don’t worry. We’ve been secretly married for two years.”
Laura pouted. “So you’ll keep being her parasite? You said you were proud.”
Ricardo laughed—a casual, confident sound.
“Exactly because I’m proud. I need more capital first. I’ve been siphoning money from her company into my account—cost overruns, fake projects. Just wait. When we’ve saved enough for our own place and business, I’ll kick her to the curb. I’m sick of pretending to be nice to her. She’s controlling. You’re better… you’re submissive.”
Laura giggled.
“Is the Segovia house safe? Sofia won’t claim it?”
“It’s safe,” he said. “The deed isn’t in my name yet, but Sofia’s naïve. She thinks the house is empty. She doesn’t know the ‘poor friend’ she’s helping is the queen in her husband’s heart.”
They laughed together—bright, carefree, cruel.
My hands clenched so hard around the fruit basket that the handle bit into my skin. I wanted to smash the door open. I wanted to tear her hair out, slap him until his mouth forgot how to lie.
But a voice—old advice I’d once heard—cut through my rage:
If an enemy attacks, don’t fight with emotion. Strike when they don’t expect it. Destroy the foundation, then bring down the whole building.
My shaking hand slid into my pocket. I pulled out my newest phone, muted it, and turned on video recording. Carefully, I aimed the lens through the crack.