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Then I enlarged the image.
And I stopped breathing.
It was a wedding.
A royal wedding.
With guests, white flowers, a toast, an altar, musicians, and the jubilant expression of a family that feels they have finally lifted a weight off their shoulders.
The man in the ivory suit, smiling as if he had just won the lottery and absolution at the same time, was Ricardo.
My husband.
My husband.
The man who had told me he was fourteen thousand kilometers away closing a deal that was crucial for our future.
Beside her, wearing a white dress, with impeccable manicures and one hand placed with theatrical pride on her belly, was Ximena.
Twenty-four years.
Junior business development.
Ambitious, quiet, observant, and always just barely too available whenever Ricardo showed up at the office.
I recognized her instantly.
Not only because of the face, but because of that retrospective discomfort that suddenly turns a hundred scattered details into a single unbearable truth.
His laughter was too soft in meetings where he had nothing to contribute.
The messages outside of business hours said they were “due to project emergencies”.
The habit of using the same shades of perfume that Ricardo liked on other women, although I would never have known that he had a list.
I kept sliding with my numb finger.
There were more photos.
Many more.
Her sisters were there.
His uncles.
How thể là hình ảnh về đám cưới
His cousins.
My college friends who always treated me with that textbook courtesy reserved for the wife who pays too much and smiles too little.
Everyone knew.
All.
And nobody had said a single word to me.
They had attended a wedding held on top of my humiliation while I remained seated in an office closing the biggest project of the year to sustain a domestic empire that I also paid for.
Teresa’s post contained a phrase that still makes my blood boil when I remember it.
“My son is finally happy with the right woman. Now he will have the family he deserves.”
I didn’t feel any pain at first.
I felt disgusted.
That kind of clean, sudden disgust that tears away the emotional makeup of an entire relationship and forces you to see it as it always was when no one was watching.
I didn’t cry.
I didn’t scream.
I didn’t throw the phone away.
I called Teresa.
Immediately.
Without thinking twice, because there are questions that are not asked out of hope, but for the simple right to hear the exact level of contempt with which you have been buried.
She answered the second ring, with that satisfied voice of a woman who always believed that lineage is more important than decency.
He didn’t even pretend to be surprised when he heard me.
—Tell me this is a joke— I said.
My voice sounded too calm, and that encouraged her to be even crueler.
Teresa let out a dry, almost joyful giggle, one of those laughs that only people who believe they have defeated someone they don’t even know how to measure produce.
“Don’t be ridiculous, Valeria. You could never give Ricardo a child. Ximena could. She’s already pregnant. That girl knows how to take care of a man. Unlike you.”
Not like you.
Always busy.
Always working.
Always “obsessed with money” even though the money came from my accounts and kept her whole family breathing as if it were an inherited right.
I closed my eyes for a second and let her continue.
Sometimes the most arrogant people incriminate themselves best when they believe their victory is already complete.
Teresa continued speaking, almost with relief, as if she had been waiting for years for the opportunity to unleash all the poison without having to maintain the social mask afterwards.
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