What a sh0ck to visit my friend in the hospital. My husband was taking care of her. I withdrew my assets and blocked them…

That morning, Madrid looked grayer than usual—yet my spirits were strangely bright. I’m Sofia, and I was busy smoothing my husband Ricardo’s tie as he stood tall in front of the oversized mirror in our master bedroom. Our luxurious home in La Moraleja had been the quiet witness to five years of what I thought was happiness. Or at least… that’s what I believed until that day.

“Are you sure you don’t want me to pack you something for the drive?” I asked softly, patting his broad chest.

“Valencia is a long way.”
Ricardo smiled—the kind of smile that always dissolved my worries. He pressed a lingering kiss to my forehead.
“No, my love. I’m in a rush. The client in Valencia wants an urgent meeting tonight. This project matters for my portfolio. I want to prove to your father I can succeed without hiding behind your family name.”
I nodded, proud of him. Ricardo was a “hard-working” husband… even though the truth was that the money for his business, the Mitsubishi Montero he drove, and the designer suits he wore had all come from me—dividends from the company I inherited and now ran. But I never rubbed it in. In marriage, what’s mine is his too… right?

“Be careful,” I said. “Message me when you get to the hotel.”
He agreed, grabbed his keys, and left. I watched him disappear through the carved oak door—and felt a faint, uneasy tug in my chest. A warning I brushed aside. Maybe it was just the guilty relief of having the house to myself for a few days.

Later that afternoon, after several meetings at the office, my thoughts drifted to Laura—my best friend since college. She’d texted me the day before, claiming she’d been admitted to a hospital in Segovia with acute typhoid fever. Laura lived alone in that unfamiliar city. I’d always tried to help her. The little house she stayed in was one of my properties, and I’d let her live there rent-free out of compassion.
“Poor Laura,” I murmured. “She must feel so lonely.”

I glanced at the time—two o’clock. My afternoon was suddenly wide open, and an idea hit me: why not visit her? Segovia was only a couple of hours away if traffic behaved. I could surprise her with her favorite cocido and a basket of fresh fruit.

I called my driver, José—then remembered he’d phoned in sick. So I took my red Mercedes and drove myself, imagining Laura’s face lighting up when she saw me. I even planned to call Ricardo later and tell him how kind his wife was being. I could already hear his praise.
By five, I arrived at the parking lot of an elite private hospital in Segovia. Laura had said she was in VIP room 305.
VIP.

That alone made me blink. Laura didn’t work. How was she paying for a suite like that? But optimism quickly patched over my suspicion. Maybe she had savings. And if not—fine. I’d cover it.
Fruit basket in hand, I walked through corridors that smelled of antiseptic, though everything still felt polished and expensive. My footsteps echoed against marble. My heart wasn’t afraid—it was eager.
The elevator chimed on the third floor. I found room 305 at the far end of a quiet hallway, slightly isolated. And when I got close, I noticed the door wasn’t fully shut—just barely open.
I lifted a hand to knock… then froze.
Laughter drifted out.

And a man’s voice—warm, teasing, painfully familiar—stopped my blood mid-flow.

“Open your mouth, darling. Here comes the little airplane…”
My stomach dropped. That voice had kissed my forehead that morning. That voice had promised Valencia.
No. It couldn’t be.
Shaking, I stepped closer to the crack in the door and held my breath as I peered inside.
The scene hit like a sledgehammer.
Laura sat upright on the bed—healthy, glowing, not pale at all. She wore satin pajamas, not a hospital gown. And perched beside her, feeding her apple slices with tender patience, was Ricardo.
My husband.
His eyes were soft—devoted in the exact way they had been when we were newlyweds.

“My wife is so spoiled,” Ricardo murmured, wiping the corner of Laura’s mouth with his thumb.
My wife.
The hallway tilted. I had to brace myself against the wall to keep my knees from folding.
Then Laura’s voice—sweet, whining, intimate—floated out like poison.
“When are you going to tell Sofia? I’m tired of hiding. And now I’m only a few weeks pregnant. Our child needs to be acknowledged.”
Pregnant.
Our child.

It felt like lightning split my chest.
Ricardo set the plate down and clasped Laura’s hands, kissing her knuckles like she was royalty.
“Be patient. If I divorce Sofia now, I lose everything. She’s smart—everything is under her name. The car, the watch, the project capital… it’s all her money.” He chuckled softly, almost admiring my usefulness. “But don’t worry. We’ve been secretly married for two years.”
Laura pouted. “So you’ll keep being her parasite? You said you were proud.”
Ricardo laughed—a casual, confident sound.
“Exactly because I’m proud. I need more capital first. I’ve been siphoning money from her company into my account—cost overruns, fake projects. Just wait. When we’ve saved enough for our own place and business, I’ll kick her to the curb. I’m sick of pretending to be nice to her. She’s controlling. You’re better… you’re submissive.”
Laura giggled.

“Is the Segovia house safe? Sofia won’t claim it?”
“It’s safe,” he said. “The deed isn’t in my name yet, but Sofia’s naïve. She thinks the house is empty. She doesn’t know the ‘poor friend’ she’s helping is the queen in her husband’s heart.”
They laughed together—bright, carefree, cruel.
My hands clenched so hard around the fruit basket that the handle bit into my skin. I wanted to smash the door open. I wanted to tear her hair out, slap him until his mouth forgot how to lie.
But a voice—old advice I’d once heard—cut through my rage:
If an enemy attacks, don’t fight with emotion. Strike when they don’t expect it. Destroy the foundation, then bring down the whole building.
My shaking hand slid into my pocket. I pulled out my newest phone, muted it, and turned on video recording. Carefully, I aimed the lens through the crack.

I filmed everything.

Ricardo kissing Laura’s belly. Their “secret marriage.” Their confession about embezzling my company funds. Their laughter at my generosity. All of it, crisp and merciless in 4K.
Five minutes that felt like five lifetimes.
Then I backed away and walked out—step by step, swallowing the sobs clawing up my throat. In an empty waiting room, I finally sat down, staring at the video saved on my screen.
Tears fell—briefly.
I wiped them away with the heel of my palm.
Crying wasn’t for trash.
“So this whole time…” I whispered, voice trembling as love curdled into something colder. “I’ve been sleeping with a snake.”

Laura—the friend I’d treated like a sister—was a leech with a smile. I remembered her fake tears when she claimed she had no money for food, and how I’d handed her an extra credit card. I remembered Ricardo’s “overtime” excuses—probably spent in the house I owned, with the woman I sheltered.
Pain hardened into ice.
I opened my banking app. I had full access to everything—including the trading account Ricardo “managed,” because I was the true principal owner. My fingers moved fast.
Check his balance.
€30,000 that should have been project funds.
Check transactions.
Transfers to boutiques. Jewelry. A gynecology clinic in Segovia.
“Enjoy your laughter,” I hissed. “While you still can.”
I wasn’t going to confront them in that room. That would be too easy—tears, begging, excuses, cheap theater.
No.

I wanted suffering that matched the betrayal.
I stood, straightened my jacket, and stared down the hallway toward room 305 like it was a target.
“Enjoy your honeymoon in the hospital,” I murmured. “Because tomorrow… your hell begins.”
Outside in my car, I didn’t even start the engine before calling Héctor—my trusted head of IT and security.
“Hello, Héctor,” I said, my voice calm in a way that didn’t sound like me anymore.
“Mrs. de la Vega? Is everything alright?”
“I need your help tonight. Urgent. Confidential.”
“Always, ma’am.”
“First: block Ricardo’s platinum card. Second: freeze the trading account he manages—call it a sudden internal audit. Third: alert the legal team to prepare asset recovery.”

A beat of silence—Héctor was smart enough not to ask why.

“Understood. When do we execute?”
“Now. Immediately. I want the notification to hit the moment he tries to pay for something.”
“I’ll proceed.”
“One more thing,” I added. “Find the best locksmith you can. And hire a couple of strong security men. Tomorrow morning we’re visiting the house in Segovia.”
“At your service, ma’am.”
I ended the call, started the car, and caught my reflection in the rearview mirror.
The woman who cried in that hallway was gone.
All that remained was Sofia—the CEO—who had finally learned what mercy cost.
My phone buzzed: a WhatsApp message from Ricardo.
“My love, I’ve arrived in Valencia. I’m exhausted. Going to sleep. Kisses. I love you.”
I laughed—quiet, sharp, humorless.
Then I typed my reply with perfect calm.
“Okay, honey. Sleep well. Dream sweet dreams—because tomorrow you may wake up to a surprising reality. I love you too.”
Send.
And as the screen went dark, a crooked smile spread across my lips.
The game had officially begun.

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