My best friend called me at 2 AM, begging me to come to see my wife in ER room. But I was in bed with my mistress. “I&#821 — Part 2

Her voice was quiet. Cold. Final.

Then, she looked toward the door. It opened, and Mauricio walked in. But he wasn’t alone. Behind him stepped a woman in a sharp navy suit, carrying a leather briefcase. Her eyes held the predatory gleam of a corporate litigator who had already won the case.

My stomach dropped into a bottomless pit. “What is this?” I demanded, trying to inject authority back into my voice.

Irma held my gaze, her pale face resembling carved marble. “This is the bill.”

The lawyer stepped forward and placed a thick stack of legal documents onto the rolling tray table. Divorce petitions. Absolute asset separation agreements. A formal complaint for emergency financial misconduct and misuse of joint marital accounts.

I couldn’t breathe. I looked at the paperwork, then at the woman I had underestimated for two decades. “You can’t do this to me,” I whispered.

Irma gave a small, exhausted laugh. “Can’t I?”

The room went deathly silent. Then she said the sentence that broke my spine.

“I lifted you out of the dirt when you were nothing, Marcial. But I will not keep carrying a man who chose to become trash.”

Humiliation burned like acid through my chest. I looked desperately at Mauricio, the man who had been the best man at my wedding. “You’re my friend. You set me up.”

Mauricio stepped closer, his jaw tight. “I was your friend,” he said, his voice laced with disgust. “Until you stopped being a man.”

I stood up, my pride rising faster than my shame, because men like me do not fall to their knees when the truth arrives. We look for someone else to blame. “You think a few photos can ruin me?” I snarled, pointing a finger at my wife. “I’m Marcial Salgado. I built everything! The construction firm, the warehouses, the real estate holding. You can’t touch the company!”

“The company?” Irma asked softly. “Which one, Marcial? Because my money built the first office. My jewelry paid for your first permit. My father’s land was collateral for the warehouse loan. My signature is on half the documents you never bothered to read because you thought my love meant my silence.”

I turned back to Mauricio, venom dripping from my teeth. “And what do you get out of this, huh? Did you always want to be the hero? Did you want my wife, too?”

The slap came so fast I didn’t even see his shoulder move.

Mauricio’s heavy palm cracked across my face with a sickening smack, loud enough for the nurse in the hallway to pause. For one agonizing second, no one breathed. My cheek burned like fire. My hands curled into fists, but I didn’t swing. I didn’t swing because Mauricio looked at me the way a man looks at a rabid dog that has just bitten a child.

“Say one more filthy thing about her,” Mauricio whispered, “and I’ll forget we were ever brothers.”

The lawyer cleared her throat, tapping a silver pen against the documents. “Mr. Salgado, you have two choices. Sign the temporary agreement now, leave the marital home tonight, and settle this privately. Or refuse, and by tomorrow morning, we file the preliminary injunction. Your personal and business accounts will be frozen while a judge reviews how marital assets were squandered on an affair during a life-or-death medical emergency.”

My eyes snapped back to Irma. Frozen accounts. Public exposure.

I grabbed the pen. My hand shook uncontrollably as I dragged the ink across the pages. Every signature felt like a layer of skin being peeled from my bones. I signed away my access, my home, my leverage.

I threw the pen down and stormed out of the room, my cheek throbbing, convinced I could still outsmart them. I was Marcial Salgado. I still had my house. I still had my corporate throne. I thought the worst was over.

I didn’t know that my execution had just begun.


I walked out of the hospital into a morning that felt cruelly normal. People were buying coffee. Cars were honking. A woman laughed into her phone near the entrance. For one absurd, violent second, I hated the world for continuing its mundane spin while mine was collapsing.

I pulled out my phone and dialed Valeria. Of course I did. I didn’t call my attorney yet. I didn’t call the bank. I called the woman I had destroyed my life for.

The phone rang six times and went to voicemail. I called again. Nothing. I sent a text: Emergency. Call me. The message turned blue. Read. No reply.

A sharp prick of anxiety hit my ribs, but I refused to call it fear. Fear was for men who had lost control.

I got into a taxi and gave the driver the address of my estate in San Pedro. When the taxi turned onto my pristine, tree-lined street, I sat up straight. There were two cars parked in front of my massive wrought-iron gate. One was Mauricio’s SUV. The other was a battered white van belonging to a locksmith.

I stepped out of the taxi before it even fully stopped. “What the hell is this?” I shouted.

The locksmith looked startled, dropping his drill. Mauricio did not flinch. He stood by the gate with a manila folder under one arm, his face carved from stone. Beside him was Doña Teresa, our elderly neighbor—the woman who had found Irma collapsed on the kitchen floor. She was holding a plastic bag of groceries, and when she saw me, her mouth tightened with profound, unfiltered disgust.

I ignored her, marching up to Mauricio. “This is my house.”

Mauricio casually pulled a paper from his folder and shoved it against my chest. “Temporary occupancy order. You signed it thirty minutes ago.”

“I signed under duress!” I spat, crumpling the paper.

“You signed after your wife almost died while you were with a prostitute,” Mauricio replied evenly.

I stepped toward the locksmith, who was busy replacing the heavy brass deadbolt. “Stop working right now.”

Mauricio moved, blocking my path. “Don’t.”

I laughed, a high, shaky sound. “You think you can throw me out of my own house?”

“No,” he said. “Irma can.”

The locksmith finished, the heavy click of the new metal lock echoing like a gunshot in the quiet neighborhood. The automatic gate whirred open. I pushed past Mauricio and stormed into the foyer.

Everything looked exactly the same, which somehow made it infinitely worse. The same mahogany entry table. The same painting Irma had bought from a street artist in Guadalajara. The familiar scent of lavender cleaner and the strong coffee she always brewed.

But my things were not where they should be.

My keys were missing from the ceramic bowl. My framed Businessman of the Year award was gone from the hallway wall. And in the center of the sunken living room, four large suitcases sat waiting near the door.

They weren’t packed with rage. They were packed with terrifying efficiency. My bespoke suits were folded. My watches were zipped inside their leather travel cases. My passport was in a clear plastic envelope on top.

That was what finally broke something deep inside me. Not the photos. Not the lawyer. Not Mauricio’s slap. The neatness. Irma hadn’t thrown me out in a storm of broken glass and screaming. She had removed me like a stubborn wine stain she had finally figured out how to clean.

“You had no right to let him in here,” I snapped, turning around.

Doña Teresa had stepped inside behind me. Her voice was small, but it cut to the bone. “She had every right, Marcial.”

I glared at the old woman. “You should mind your own business.”

She lifted her chin, entirely unafraid of me. “I did. That is why your wife is alive.”

That shut me up. The house seemed to hold its breath.

Mauricio pointed to the suitcases. “Take them. If you don’t, I call the police, and the entire neighborhood gets a show.”

I looked out the massive bay windows. Curtains across the street were already twitching. I had built a sterling reputation in this neighborhood. I had hosted fundraisers for the mayor in this very garden. Now, I was being evicted like a common squatter.

I grabbed the handles. The wheels bumped loudly over the imported marble floors as I dragged them out. Each click was a humiliation.

I spent that night in a sterile, beige business hotel near the financial district. Not a suite. Not an ocean view. Just a small room with a humming mini-fridge.

I sat on the edge of the bed and opened my banking app on my phone to book a long-term penthouse.

Password Incorrect.

I tried again. Incorrect.

I called the bank’s concierge line. The woman on the phone was polite in that terrifying way customer service reps are when they are reading a script that destroys your life.

“Mr. Salgado, there is a temporary federal restriction on all joint and linked corporate accounts pending a legal review.”

“I am the primary holder!” I yelled.

“I’m sorry, sir. You will need to speak with your legal representative.”

I threw the phone against the hotel wall, shattering the screen. I was locked out of my home. Locked out of my money. But I still had my company. I still had Salgado Desarrollo. Tomorrow, I would walk into the boardroom and remind everyone who built the throne they sat around.

I didn’t know the throne had already been burned to ashes.


By eight-thirty the next morning, my replacement phone was a swarm of panic.

Messages flooded in. From my partners. From board members. From my Chief Financial Officer, Gabriel.

Urgent. Need to discuss account restrictions.

Bank just flagged our credit line.

Call me NOW.

By nine-fifteen, my private assistant texted me: Sir, there are two attorneys here asking for corporate ledgers. Mrs. Salgado is with them.

I read that sentence five times. Mrs. Salgado is with them. She was supposed to be in a hospital bed, recovering from major abdominal surgery. She was supposed to be weak.

When I burst through the glass doors of Salgado Desarrollo forty minutes later, the entire floor went dead silent.

Irma was standing in the center of the lobby. She wore a simple cream blouse and black slacks. She was pale, and she held a hand subtly against her stomach, but her posture was flawless. Mauricio stood a few steps behind her, a silent bodyguard. The shark-eyed lawyer from the hospital stood beside them, holding a stack of printed spreadsheets.

My employees pretended to look at their monitors, but every ear in the room was tuned to us.

“Irma,” I hissed, striding toward her. “What are you doing here?”

She turned. For a fraction of a second, the lobby disappeared, and I saw the girl she used to be—the one who ate street corn with me on the sidewalks, who promised she didn’t care if we were poor as long as we were honest.

Then, the woman I created returned.

“I own forty percent of Salgado Desarrollo,” she said clearly, ensuring her voice carried across the cubicles.

I scoffed, lowering my voice. “On paper. You are embarrassing yourself. Go back to the hospital.”

Her lawyer smiled—a terrifying, bloodless thing. “Paper is where legal ownership lives, Mr. Salgado. We are proceeding to the conference room to review withdrawals from the joint-controlled operating reserves.”

The meeting that followed lasted three agonizing hours.

I tried to dominate it. I interrupted. I demanded. I slammed my hands on the mahogany table. But then the lawyer connected a laptop to the projector.

Every receipt. Every hidden transaction.

They projected the cost of Valeria’s diamond bracelet. The luxury suite in Monterrey. The private yacht rental. The spa days. And worst of all, the timestamped dinner for two at a Michelin-star restaurant on the exact night Irma had been admitted to emergency care.

No one said the word “affair.” They didn’t need to. The receipts painted a masterpiece of my depravity.

Gabriel, my CFO, a man who had worked for me for eleven years, slowly took off his glasses and rubbed his eyes. He knew the difference between a legitimate executive expense and a man trying to decorate his mistress with company money.

“Marcial,” Gabriel said carefully, looking at the screen. “Some of these charges were categorized under your signature as ‘client hospitality.’”

“They were,” I lied, my voice tight.

Irma looked across the table at me. “Which client, Marcial?”

The boardroom went silent. I hated her in that moment. Not because she was lying, but because she didn’t have to. The truth had walked into the room before she did, and it had taken my seat.

By noon, the board officially requested “temporary spending controls.” By one o’clock, my access to the corporate credit lines was suspended. By two, Gabriel quietly asked me to step back from daily financial approvals until an internal audit could be completed.

I laughed in his face. I expected the room to laugh with me.

No one did.

That was when I understood. They were afraid of the scandal, yes. But they were also afraid of me. Not my power. My recklessness. I had become a liability to my own legacy.

I left the office without saying goodbye. No one followed me to the elevators.

I sat in the dim concrete silence of the underground parking garage, desperate. I pulled out my new phone and dialed Valeria’s number. She had to answer. I needed someone to tell me I was still a man, still in control.

She answered on the second ring. “Hello?” Her voice was soft, cautious.

“It’s me,” I breathed.

Silence. Then: “Marcial?”

“Where are you? I need to see you right now.”

“I don’t think that’s a good idea.”

I gripped the leather steering wheel, my knuckles turning white. “What do you mean?”

“I didn’t know you were married like that, Marcial.”

I almost laughed at the absurdity. “Married like what? You saw the ring on my finger, Valeria! I told you it was complicated.”

“You told me it was over,” she shot back, her voice trembling. “You said she knew. You said you were separated emotionally.”

Separated emotionally. The phrase sounded vile now. I had used it like cheap cologne over a rotting corpse.

“I need you,” I pleaded, my voice cracking.

A heavy silence fell over the line. “I’m sorry, Marcial.”

A cold dread coiled in my gut. “What did you do?”

“They came to my apartment,” she whispered.

“Who?”

“Her lawyers. They had the photos. The receipts for the jewelry, the trips. They said if I kept spending money tied to disputed marital accounts, I could be named as a co-defendant in a civil fraud suit.” She took a shaky breath. “I gave them a sworn statement, Marcial. I told them you lied to me. I told them you said the marriage was finished.”

The concrete pillars of the garage seemed to tilt. “You gave them a statement? You betrayed me?”

“I protected myself!” she cried. “You would have done the exact same thing!”

There it was. The mirror I didn’t ask for. I wanted to call her a snake, a gold-digger, a liar. But the most horrifying part wasn’t that she had betrayed me. The horrifying part was that she had learned exactly how to do it from watching me.

“You said you loved me,” I whispered into the dead air of the car.

Continue to Part 3 Part 2 of 3

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