I was looking at the man who had copied my documents while sleeping beside me.
We returned to my house to go through everything more calmly. Lara wanted to come so she could give a statement. I let her.
That night, I understood something difficult:
she wasn’t my enemy.
She had been lied to too.
At 3:47 a.m., I called my bank’s fraud line. After verifying my identity, the agent confirmed that someone had tried to transfer money from my business account to Grupo Altacrest less than an hour earlier. The transaction had been frozen because of irregular authorization details.
I went cold.
Emiliano wasn’t planning to leave me for another woman.
He was planning to leave with my money.
The next morning, I sat in the Insurgentes bank branch with Lara beside me and my friend Ximena, a lawyer, on speakerphone from Monterrey. She listened to everything in silence and then said:
“Do not speak to him by phone again. Everything in writing. Men like that survive on confusion. Don’t give him a single drop.”
The bank investigator reviewed the paperwork, asked questions, and made copies. When she stepped away, Lara handed me her phone.
“I found this before I blocked him.”
They were screenshots. In one, Emiliano had written: Give me forty-eight hours and I’ll be free and have money. In another, she had saved a voice note. She pressed play.
His voice filled the table with that false warmth I knew too well.