I gripped the railing so tightly my fingers hurt.
“What if she wants to call her brother?” Julián asked.
“You won’t let her. And especially don’t let her talk to Gabriel,” Teresa replied. “That boy notices too much.”
Gabriel. Julián’s younger brother. Quiet. Observant. The only one who had looked at me strangely during dinner whenever Teresa interrupted me.
I stepped back silently and returned to the guest room they had given me “to rest before the honeymoon.” I closed the door and stood there frozen. My wedding dress hung nearby. My suitcase sat untouched. My phone lay on the nightstand.
Just hours earlier, I had been a bride.
Now I felt like prey.
I thought about screaming. Running. Calling the police.
But something inside me told me to stay calm.
I picked up my phone and texted Gabriel:
“I heard everything. They want me to sign so they can take my house. Please help me. Don’t tell them.”
He replied almost instantly.
“Stay calm. Don’t open the front door. I’ll come through the patio.”
When he arrived, his face was pale, his eyes filled with anger.
“I’m sorry,” he whispered. “I knew my mom and Julián had done questionable things before… but I never thought they’d go this far.”
My voice trembled.
—Before? What do you mean?
Gabriel swallowed hard.
—You’re not the first woman they’ve tricked… just the first they planned to destroy like this.
A cold wave ran through me.
And inside that house where I had been welcomed as family, my brother-in-law and I began planning something that would turn their trap into their worst nightmare by sunrise.
PART 2
We sat on the floor beside my closed suitcase, like two unwilling accomplices. Gabriel spoke slowly, carefully, as if every word carried years of guilt.
He told me that three years earlier, Julián had convinced an ex-girlfriend to invest money in a fake import business. Teresa had coached him—what to say, how to make her feel special, how to sell her a dream of a shared future.
The woman discovered the truth before losing everything and chose to walk away quietly to avoid scandal.
“When I found out, I wanted to leave,” Gabriel said, rubbing his face. “But my mom convinced me Julián had changed. I wanted to believe her. Then a month ago, he started asking about your house—its value, your savings, whether it was in your name… I should’ve warned you.”
Pain and anger burned inside me.
—I told Julián everything because he was my husband.
Gabriel shook his head.
“No. They were building a plan to drain you.”
I inhaled deeply.
—What are they going to make me sign?
—A power of attorney, most likely. And documents to add Julián as co-owner of your house. My mom hides traps in “pretty” folders. She’ll rush you. Make you feel guilty for reading too much.
I didn’t cry anymore. Fear was slowly turning into something sharper.
—Then we need proof.
He nodded immediately.
Over the next two hours, we built a plan.
I changed all my passwords—banking, email, digital signatures, everything. I enabled two-factor authentication and logged out of all devices. My hands trembled at first, then steadied.