Gabriel recorded a video of me stating my name, the date, what I had overheard, and that I did not authorize any legal or financial documents without independent legal review. Then he recorded his own testimony.
“If they try to twist things tomorrow,” he said, “they won’t erase this.”
At 5:25 a.m., I texted my brother Rodrigo:
“Emergency. I’m safe for now. Be here at 8:30. Bring your lawyer friend. Don’t call.”
He replied:
“On my way.”
Before sunrise, Gabriel returned with a small recorder.
—Today, it records lies.
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By seven, I was dressed simply—jeans, sweater, hair tied back. On the outside, I looked exhausted. Inside, I was ready.
At breakfast, Teresa smiled warmly, serving food like nothing was wrong.
“Good morning, dear. Did you sleep well?”
—Like a rock, I said.
Julián kissed my cheek, making my stomach turn.
“After breakfast, we’ll go over some paperwork,” he said casually.
—Of course, I replied. “Family always helps.”
At 8:20, Teresa placed a thick folder on the table.
“Nothing important,” she said sweetly. “Just routine documents.”
I opened it—and my blood boiled.
Everything was there. Power of attorney. Property transfer clauses. Bank forms.
Prepared before the wedding.
“And this?” I asked.
Teresa smiled.
—Legal language always sounds complicated. Just sign.
Julián leaned closer.
—Don’t make this difficult.
The doorbell rang.
Gabriel set down his cup.
—The part you didn’t plan for.
When Rodrigo walked in with lawyer Ximena Salgado, Julián’s face lost all color.