My husband said he was “on a business trip,” but when I went to the hospital to visit my sick friend, I suddenly heard his voice behind the door… and what I heard chilled me to the bone.

My husband said he was “on a business trip,” but when I went to the hospital to visit my sick friend, I suddenly heard his voice behind the door… and what I heard chilled me to the bone.


Our child.

I felt as if a lightning bolt had struck my chest.

Ricardo put down his plate, took Laura’s hands, and kissed her fingers as if she were a queen.

Be patient. If I divorce Sofia now, I’ll lose everything. She’s clever; everything is in her name. The car, the watch, the project capital… it’s all hers.”

She let out a little laugh, almost admiring my usefulness.

“But don’t worry. We’ve been secretly married for two years.”

Laura pouted.

“So you’re going to continue being his parasite? You said you were proud of it.”

Ricardo let out a relaxed and confident laugh.

“Precisely because I’m proud. I need more capital.” I’m already diverting money from your company to my account: cost overruns, fictitious projects. You’ll see.

Once we have saved enough for the house and the business,

I’ll leave her like an old sock. I’m sick of pretending to be nice to her. She’s controlling. You’re better… you’re submissive.

Laura laughed softly.

“And is the house in Segovia safe? Won’t Sofia claim it?”

“It’s safe,” she replied. “The deed isn’t in my name yet, but Sofia is naive. She thinks the house is empty. She doesn’t know that the ‘poor friend’ she’s helping is the queen in her husband’s heart.”

They laughed together: a clear, light, and cruel laugh.

My hands tightened so much around the basket that the handle dug into my skin. I wanted to tear the door down. I wanted to rip out his hair, slap him until he forgot how to lie.

But a voice, an old piece of advice I had heard long ago, pierced my anger:

If an enemy attacks, don’t fight impulsively. Attack when they least expect it. Destroy the foundation, then bring down the entire structure.

My trembling hand slipped into my pocket. I pulled out my newest phone, put it on silent, and started recording. Carefully, I pointed the camera through the slit.

I recorded everything.

Ricardo kissing Laura’s belly. Their “secret marriage.” His confession about embezzling funds from my company. His laughter at my generosity. All of it, clear and ruthless, in 4K.

Five minutes that felt like five lifetimes.

Then I backed away and left, step by step, swallowing the sobs that were scratching my throat. In an empty waiting room, I finally sat down, staring at the video playing on the screen.

Tears flowed, briefly.

I dried them with the back of my hand.

Crying wasn’t trash.

“So all this time…” I whispered, my voice trembling as love grew colder, “…I’ve been sleeping with a snake.”

Laura, the friend I treated like a sister, was nothing more than a smiling leech. I remembered her fake tears when she said she had no money for food, and how I’d given her an extra credit card.

I remembered Ricardo’s excuses, who said “too many hours of work”, probably spent in the house I had, with the woman I was hosting.

The pain hardened like ice.

I opened my bank’s app. I had full access to everything, including the trading account that Ricardo “managed,” because I was the actual owner. My fingers moved quickly.

Check your balance.

€30,000 that should have been funds for projects.

View transactions.

Transfers to boutiques. Jewelry. A gynecological clinic in Segovia.

“Enjoy your laughter,” I whispered. “While you can.”

“I won’t confront you in that room.” That would be too easy: tears, pleading, excuses, cheap theater.

No.

He wanted suffering commensurate with the betrayal.

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