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Chapter 2: The Silence After the Truth Santiago didn’t remember walking away from the greenhouse. One moment he was standing there, watching the woman he had built his entire life around kiss another man. The next, he was back behind the hedge with Abril pulling gently at his sleeve like she was afraid he might disappear. “Sir…” she whispered. “We need to go. Now.” But Santiago didn’t respond. His eyes were still fixed on the greenhouse. On Valeria. On the life that had just cracked open without warning. For a long time, he said nothing. Then, finally, in a voice so quiet it almost didn’t exist: “How long?” Abril hesitated. “I don’t know. But they said today.” A beat of silence. The black sedan still idled at the gate. Patient. Waiting. Like time itself had chosen a side. Santiago slowly exhaled. “Show me the recording.” Abril’s fingers trembled as she handed him the old phone. He pressed play. Valeria’s voice filled the device—clear, cold, unrecognizable. “…he never looks up when he’s stressed. Just make sure the switch happens before the flight…” A man laughed softly in the background. “…after Monterrey, it’ll look like an accident or disappearance. Either way, it’s done.” Santiago stopped the recording. Not because he needed more proof. But because he didn’t. For the first time in years, his mind wasn’t racing toward deals or meetings or numbers. It was completely still. And in that stillness, something inside him changed. “Apríl,” he said finally. “How did you know to trust your instincts?” She looked down. “Because adults don’t listen when children are right.” That hit deeper than anything else. Santiago slowly stood. And this time, he was no longer a man late for a flight. He was a man deciding whether he would live through the next hour. “We’re not going to the airport,” he said. Abril blinked. “Then where?” Santiago turned toward the mansion. “Inside.” / Chapter 1 / 2 142

Chapter 3: The House That Lied

Chapter 3: The House That Lied

The mansion felt different when Santiago stepped back inside.

Same marble floors. Same quiet luxury. Same perfection.

But now it looked like a stage set built around a lie.

Abril stayed close behind him.

Every staff member greeted him normally.

“Good morning, sir.”

“Safe travels, Mr. Robles.”

No one knew.

Or maybe everyone knew… and had simply learned how to survive it.

Santiago walked straight to his private office and closed the door.

Then he finally spoke.

“I want everything on Valeria. Calls. Transfers. Meetings. Cameras. Everything.”

Abril stood near the bookshelf, silent.

Within minutes, Santiago’s assistant began pulling data.

What came back was not just betrayal.

It was structure.

Hidden accounts. Offshore transfers. A second phone registered under a false identity. Meetings scheduled during his “business trips” that never made sense before.

And worst of all—

A life carefully built beside his own, without him inside it.

Abril watched his face as each piece fell into place.

“You still don’t believe it fully,” she said softly.

Santiago didn’t answer.

Because she was right.

Belief takes time.

Truth arrives instantly, but acceptance lags behind it like a shadow that refuses to catch up.

Then his assistant paused.

“There’s something else, sir…”

A new file appeared on the screen.

A life insurance policy.

Santiago’s name.

Valeria as sole beneficiary.

Activated six months ago.

He stared at it for a long time.

Then he laughed once—short, empty, disbelieving.

“So that’s it,” he whispered.

Abril stepped forward. “Sir…”

But he raised a hand slightly.

Not anger.

Not fear.

Understanding.

Outside the office window, the black sedan was still at the gate.

Still waiting.

Still patient.

Santiago turned off the monitor.

And in the silence that followed, he made a decision.

“Call the airport,” he said. “Cancel everything under my name.”

Abril’s eyes widened. “And her?”

Santiago looked toward the garden where Valeria once stood like a memory that no longer belonged to him.

“Let her think I got in the car.”

A pause.

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Then he added quietly:

“Sometimes the best way to catch a liar… is to let them believe the lie worked.”

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