HE SLAPPED YOU IN FRONT OF HIS MISTRESS AND TOLD Y…

HE SLAPPED YOU IN FRONT OF HIS MISTRESS AND TOLD YOU TO KNEEL—BUT BY SUNRISE, HIS MANSION, COMPANY, AND BANK ACCOUNTS WERE GONE

PART 2

You do not cry in the black SUV.

Not because it does not hurt. Your cheek burns where Andrés’s hand landed, your palm is wrapped in a white towel already spotted with blood, and your chest feels as if someone has poured ice inside it. But tears would belong to the woman who still hoped he might run after you.

That woman is gone.

The driver keeps his eyes forward as the gates of the mansion disappear behind you. In the rearview mirror, you see two security guards standing stiffly near the entrance, pretending they did not just hear their employer’s world crack open. Your phone vibrates again and again, but you do not look down.

You already know who it is.

Andrés.

Doña Mercedes.

Maybe Brenda, feeling brave because women like her always mistake borrowed power for ownership.

The man beside you, Licenciado Ríos, opens a black folder and places it gently on the seat between you.

“Señora Escalante,” he says, “your father asked me to confirm. Do you authorize full activation?”

You look out the window at the dark streets of Las Lomas, at houses lit like palaces, at iron gates and trimmed hedges hiding families who believe money can polish cruelty.

“Yes,” you say.

“All of it?”

You turn toward him.

“He hit me.”

Ríos’s jaw tightens.

“I understand.”

“No,” you say quietly. “You don’t. He hit the woman who signed the guarantees keeping his company alive. He hit the woman who kept his mother’s lawsuits buried. He hit the woman whose father bought the debt his family was drowning in and let them keep pretending they were rich.”

Ríos says nothing.

You look at the folder.

“So yes. All of it.”

He nods and sends one message.

The storm begins with a vibration.

Not loud. Not dramatic. Just one silent pulse traveling through legal networks, banks, investment accounts, corporate servers, and private security systems. By the time Andrés finishes laughing in that marble living room, the first account is already frozen.

At 10:42 p.m., the corporate credit line is suspended.

At 10:47, the emergency lien on the mansion is recorded.

At 10:55, the board of Grupo Armenta receives notice that all private guarantees from Escalante Holdings are revoked due to breach of conduct and fraudulent misrepresentation.

At 11:03, Andrés’s personal cards begin declining.

You finally look at your phone.

Sixteen missed calls.

Thirty-four messages.

The first is from Andrés.

Where the hell are you?

Then another.

Don’t make this dramatic. Come back so we can fix this.

Then another.

My mother is upset. You owe her an apology.

You almost laugh.

The man slapped you, accused you of theft, paraded his mistress in your home, and still believes the emergency is his mother’s feelings.

Then you see the newest message.

Why was my corporate card declined?

There it is.

The first note of panic.

You type nothing.

Instead, you forward the message to Ríos.

He smiles faintly.

“Useful.”

The SUV turns into the underground entrance of Escalante Tower, the glass-and-steel headquarters your father built after starting with a textile warehouse in Puebla. Andrés used to mock the building in private. He called it “your father’s monument to insecurity.”

But every time he needed investors, he was happy to use the Escalante name.

The elevator carries you to the forty-first floor.

Your father is waiting.

Alejandro Escalante stands at the end of the conference room in a charcoal suit, silver hair neat, hands behind his back. He is seventy-two now, but he still has the presence of a man who can make younger men sit straighter by entering a room.

When he sees your face, something in him breaks.

Not loudly.

Not visibly to anyone else.

But you know him.

His eyes drop to your cheek, then your bandaged hand. For one second, he is not the businessman, not the chairman, not the man newspapers call cold. He is your father, seeing his daughter hurt.

“Mariana,” he says.

You walk toward him.

The moment his arms close around you, the strength you have been holding like glass finally cracks. You do not sob. You refuse to give Andrés that much. But one tear slips down your face and lands on your father’s lapel.

Your father holds you tighter.

“I told myself I would not interfere unless you asked,” he whispers. “I should have broken that promise.”

You step back and wipe your cheek.

“No. I had to see it myself.”

His face hardens.

“And now?”

You look through the glass wall toward the city lights.

“Now they learn what I built while they were laughing at my purse.”

Your father nods once.

The room is full of people already moving: lawyers, accountants, security consultants, corporate officers, and one forensic auditor named Julia Mena, who has been waiting for years to open the Armenta files. You used to think she enjoyed numbers too much. Tonight, you are grateful for it.

She places a tablet in front of you.

“We already have confirmation,” Julia says. “Andrés attempted to move funds from the operating account at 11:12 p.m. The transfer failed.”

“To where?”

“A personal account under Brenda Solís.”

Your stomach goes still.

Not because you are surprised.

Because betrayal always has another basement.

Ríos leans over the tablet.

“He tried to pay her?”

Julia swipes to another screen.

“He has been paying her. Rent, travel, jewelry, cosmetic procedures, and a down payment on an apartment in Polanco. Most came from accounts linked to Grupo Armenta.”

Your father’s expression becomes dangerous.

You press your fingers against the edge of the table.

“For how long?”

Julia looks at you with something like apology.

“Fourteen months.”

Fourteen months.

That means Brenda was not a new mistake. She was a second life. A second life funded by a company you saved from bankruptcy, protected by guarantees signed with your name, and polished by dinners you hosted while she waited in hotel suites.

You close your eyes once.

Then open them.

“Add it to the complaint.”

Julia nods.

At 11:28 p.m., Andrés calls again.

This time, you answer.

Not because you want to hear him.

Because everyone in the room is ready to record.

His voice explodes through the speaker.

“What did you do?”

You sit at the head of the conference table.

“I left.”

“Don’t play with me, Mariana. My cards are frozen. The bank says there’s a compliance hold. My CFO is calling me like the building is on fire.”

“It is.”

Silence.

Then his voice lowers.

“Listen to me carefully. Whatever tantrum you’re throwing, stop it. You are my wife.”

You look at your father.

He does not move.

“No,” you say. “I was your wife when you slapped me. Now I am the majority creditor’s representative.”

Another silence.

This one is better.

“What the hell does that mean?”

“It means you should call your lawyer.”

“You think your father scares me?”

Your father finally speaks.

“He should.”

Andrés goes completely quiet.