Sofía’s voice stayed calm, but each word landed like a final stamp on a document.
“You didn’t know about my award because you didn’t ask,” she said. “You didn’t know about my foundation because you didn’t care. You didn’t know who I was becoming because you were too busy becoming someone you thought mattered more.”
Javier’s eyes flashed with panic.
“This isn’t fair,” he whispered.
Sofía tilted her head slightly.
“Fair?” she repeated. “Do you know what fairness looks like? It looks like giving your spouse the dignity of being seen.”
Javier opened his mouth, but no words came out.
Because for once, there was nothing he could negotiate.
Nothing he could charm his way out of.
The CEO Riveros walked by at that moment, pausing just long enough to look at them.
His expression was polite.
But his eyes were sharp.
He had witnessed enough to understand what kind of man Javier was.
And what kind of woman Sofía was.
Riveros nodded to Sofía respectfully.
“Mrs. Mendoza,” he said, then walked away.
Javier watched him go, realizing too late the damage wasn’t just personal.
It was professional.
He’d thought tonight was about climbing higher.
Instead, he’d been exposed.
The morning after
Javier came home like a man who’d lost a war he didn’t admit was happening.
Sofía arrived later, calm, removed, as if the night had clarified everything.
Javier waited until they were alone, then spoke in a voice that finally sounded like truth.
“I was wrong,” he said.
Sofía didn’t respond immediately.
Javier swallowed.
“I didn’t want to bring you because I was afraid,” he admitted. “Afraid you’d make me look… different.”
Sofía stared at him.
“You mean human,” she said.
Javier flinched.
He nodded slowly.
“I’ve been chasing approval,” he said quietly. “And I took you for granted.”
Sofía’s eyes didn’t soften yet.
“Words are easy,” she said. “Changing is hard.”
“I want to change,” Javier insisted, voice cracking. “I’m in love with you, Sofia. I just—forgot how to show it.”
Sofía’s expression stayed guarded.