“I was always useful to use.”
She flinched.
Then her voice softened, but not enough to hide the motive.
“Raúl has nowhere to go.”
“He has his new wife.”
“She went back to her parents.”
“Smart woman.”
Lupita’s eyes sharpened. “So you’re enjoying this.”
You looked behind you into your clean hallway, at the boxes no longer cluttering your life, at the silence that did not feel lonely yet but already felt safer.
“No,” you said. “I am surviving it.”
She pressed one hand to her chest. “He needs clothes for work. He needs his laptop.”
“His boxes are labeled.”
“He says you kept important documents.”
“Grace has copies of what matters. He can request anything through attorneys.”
“Attorneys,” she spat. “You Americans and your lawsuits.”
You smiled faintly. “We’re in Texas, Lupita. Paperwork is practically a second language.”
She did not smile.
“Do you know what divorce will do to him?”
You leaned closer to the gap in the door.
“Do you know what your son did to me?”
For once, she had no immediate answer.
So you closed the door.
The first court hearing happened two weeks later.
Raúl arrived in a navy suit you recognized because you had picked it out. He looked tired. Smaller. The expensive confidence was gone, replaced by the nervous energy of a man who had discovered judges were less impressed by charm than coworkers and mothers.
Fernanda was not there.
Her annulment attorney had already contacted Grace to coordinate evidence. That detail pleased you more than you wanted to admit.
Raúl’s lawyer tried to argue that the canceled cards had caused him undue hardship.
Grace stood calmly.
“Your Honor, the cards were issued solely in my client’s name. Mr. Torres used them as an authorized user. After texting my client at 2:47 a.m. to inform her that he had married another woman, she removed him from access to her credit lines. That is not hardship. That is a natural financial consequence.”
The judge looked over his glasses at Raúl.
“Sir, did you send that text?”
Raúl shifted. “I was emotional.”
The judge repeated, “Did you send it?”
“Yes.”
“Did you marry another woman while still legally married to Mrs. Torres?”
Raúl’s lawyer stood quickly. “Your Honor, we dispute the legal characterization of the ceremony—”
The judge held up one hand.
“I’ll take that as complicated. Continue.”
Grace did continue.
Beautifully.
She presented the house deed in your name, purchased before marriage. Mortgage payments from your separate account. Credit card statements showing Raúl’s travel, hotel, and wedding-related expenses charged to your cards or attempted after revocation. Screenshots of his messages. Records of his authorized access. Documentation of the locksmith, police visit, and inventory of packed belongings.
Raúl’s lawyer tried to claim you had acted vindictively.
Grace’s smile was small and lethal.
“Vindictive would have been posting his wedding photos beside the marriage certificate showing my client was still his wife. Mrs. Torres has been remarkably restrained.”
You looked down to hide your smile.
The temporary orders were granted.
Raúl could not enter your home.
He could not access your accounts.
He could not incur debt in your name.
He had to communicate through attorneys.
As you left the courthouse, he called your name.
“Mariana.”
Grace paused beside you.
You turned.
He stood near the courthouse steps, hands open, eyes red.
“I know I messed up.”
You almost laughed at the size of that understatement.
He stepped closer, but Grace shifted slightly, and he stopped.
“I got scared,” he said. “Things with us felt dead. Fernanda made me feel alive.”
You looked at him.
There it was.
The confession men always think sounds deep.
He felt alive.
As if your marriage had been a hospital bed he had escaped instead of a house you kept warm while he drained it.
“You could have asked for a divorce.”
He swallowed. “I didn’t want to hurt you.”
“No,” you said. “You didn’t want to lose access before securing the next door.”
His face hardened.