“How beautiful your husband looks when he sleeps after betraying you.”
That was the message I received at 3:07 a.m.
My cell phone vibrated over the bureau, in the main chamber of a huge house in Lomas de Chapultepec, a house so quiet that even the lie was breathing short. I opened my eyes before I touched the phone. I don’t know why. Maybe because a wife learns to wake up before misfortune walks through the door.
The photo came from an unknown number, but I didn’t need to ask who it was.
Valeria.
My husband’s personal assistant.
The same one he presented at a business dinner in Polanco as “the most loyal person in the office.” The same one who laughed too much of his jokes, who accommodated his tie in front of me, who looked at me as if he was already measuring the curtains of my house.
I opened the picture.
There she was, lying in a suite of the Four Seasons of Reforma, wrapped in my husband’s white shirt like a victory flag. Behind, half asleep between scrambled sheets, was Rodrigo Santillan.
My husband.
Managing Director of Santillan Logistics Group.
The man I had left my last name for in the background. The man I helped raise a company that now moved merchandise through ports, airports and borders across Mexico.
Valeria smiled in the picture.
Not like a nervous lover.
I smiled like someone who had already won.
I waited to feel anger. Pain. Shame. Something.
But the only thing that came out of me was a dry, short laugh, so cold that I didn’t even recognize it myself.
Poor Valeria.
He thought I was just “the wife of Rodrigo.”
I did not know that before being his wife, I had been Mariana Torres, daughter of a broken Veracruz carrier, fierce accountant, invisible negotiator and the only reason why Santillán Grupo Logístico had not sunk three times in the last five years.
I didn’t answer.
I didn’t call Rodrigo.
I didn’t cry.
I kept the picture.
Then I opened the board chat. There were the partners, the auditors, the corporate lawyer, two Monterrey investors and even Don Ernesto, Rodrigo’s father, who still held stocks and pride.
My finger stayed still for a second.
Then I forwarded the photo.
And I wrote:
“It seems that our CEO is working overtime on a very intimate project. Miss Valeria deserves recognition for her surrender. Congratulations to both. Hopefully the heir will arrive soon and with preferred shares.”
I sent.
Nothing happened for a few seconds.
Then the blue popcorn began to appear.
One. One.
Three.
Seven.
Twelve.
The scandal was already awake.
I woke up without making noise. I pulled out of the safe a black suitcase that had been ready for two months: passport, deeds, statements, copies of contracts, two new phones and a folder with emails that Rodrigo never imagined I had.
I took off my ring.
I left it on his pillow.
I went down to the garage and didn’t take the Mercedes or the armored van. I took a gray, discreet car, registered in the name of a shell company that Rodrigo had forgotten.
When I left the house, Mexico City was still asleep.
Not me.
At 5:20 I was on my way to the airport.
At 6:40 she was sitting on a flight to Merida, with a coffee in her hand and a new phone on.
I wrote to my lawyer:
“Execute the plan.”
His answer came instantly:
“Confirmed.”
I looked out the window as the city became small under the clouds.
Valeria thought she humiliated me with a picture.
I couldn’t believe what was about to happen…
PART 2
Rodrigo woke up at 8:13 with a hundred and twenty-six missed calls.
First he thought it was an accident at the company. Then he saw the council chat. Then he saw the photo.
His face was left without blood.
Valeria, still wrapped in the sheet, opened her eyes when he suddenly got up.
“What happened?” he asked.
Rodrigo did not answer. He snatched the cell phone from his hand. In the gallery was the same photo. Sent to my number at 3:01.
He looked at her as if he had just discovered that the fire had started in his own bed.
“You sent her.”
Valeria pressed the sheet against her chest.
“She had the right to know.”
“You don’t understand what you did,” Rodrigo muttered.
“I do understand,” she said, with a rage that trembled in her mouth. “You said you were going to leave her after the closure with the Monterrey. You said that marriage no longer existed.”
Rodrigo let out a bitter laugh.
“I say a lot of things.”
There, for the first time, Valeria understood that she was not the chosen one. It was just a distraction with access to the boss’s calendar.
Meanwhile, in Santa Fe’s offices, the entire building looked like a pressure cooker. The employees were pretending to work, but everyone had seen the picture. The directors walked fast. The lawyers came in and out of a boardroom. Investors demanded an urgent meeting.
At 10:30, the council met without me.
Rodrigo arrived in the wrinkled suit and the face of a man who had slept in a lie and woken up in a crisis.
Don Ernesto looked at him from the head of the table.
“Explain.”
“It’s a personal matter,” Rodrigo said.
Counselor Patricia Salgado slowly removed her glasses.
“Sleeping with your assistant, who has access to confidential documents, tax routes, customs contracts, and investor agendas, is not a personal matter.”
The corporate lawyer put a folder on the table.
“This morning we received notifications of preservation of evidence from Mr. Jimena Alcázar, representative of Mariana Torres. Preliminary information was also provided to the National Banking Commission and the tax authority.”
Rodrigo swallowed saliva.
“What information?”
No one answered immediately.
Because everyone was beginning to understand that the picture was not the scandal.
It was the door.
I was in a discreet house in Merida, owned by a college friend. From the terrace you could hear birds, not traffic. The heat was clean, brutal, honest. Nothing to do with the fancy cold of the house where I had slept with Rodrigo for seven years.
My lawyer appeared on video call.
“They already received the package,” he said.
“What about the advice?”
“In panic. Rodrigo wants to talk to you.”
“No.”
Jimena nodded, as if she already knew.
“His father asked if you are safe.”
That hurt me more than I expected. Don Ernesto was never loving, but he once told me privately: “My son inherited the last name. You earned your respect.”
I didn’t forget.
“Tell him I’m alive. Nothing more.”
Six months earlier, I had found the first fake bill.
A consultancy in Querétaro charging millions for non-existent logistics services. Then another one in Panama. Then three companies in Nuevo León. At first I thought he was a manager stealing. But the approvals had Rodrigo’s digital signature.
Then I found transfers.
Then mail.
Then meetings marked by Valeria on the same days when payments were authorized.
He wasn’t just a lover.
He was complicit.
The deflected money exceeded 240 million pesos.
And the worst was not that.
Rodrigo planned to use the closure of a merger to get me out of advice, blame myself for emotional instability for “zeals” and divorce leaving me as a scorned wife.
That’s why I had packed my bag.
That’s why I didn’t scream.
That’s why I waited.
Leave a Comment