By then, I was sitting across from my lawyer, Valeria Montes, in an office in Polanco with enormous windows and a frightening calm. On the table, I placed my phone, a folder with account statements, internal reports, and copies of the property deeds.
Valeria watched the entire video without changing her expression.
When Teresa shouted that Alejandro should “put everything in his name,” my lawyer barely raised an eyebrow.
—Did he know the house was protected by a prenuptial agreement?
—Yes.
—And even so, he allowed his mother to say that?
—He didn’t just allow it. I think he wanted it.
Then I handed her the rest.
For months, my chief financial officer had been detecting strange charges on Alejandro’s card: meals at expensive restaurants on Masaryk, hotel nights in Puebla, gifts sent to addresses that didn’t belong to clients. There were also emails forwarded from his personal account to Teresa with information about contracts, income, and properties.
It wasn’t a huge theft.
It was something worse: rotten trust.
Alejandro had used my company as if it were an extension of his ego. And Teresa spoke of my money as if it were a family inheritance I was wrongfully occupying.
—This is not a mother-in-law quarrel —Valeria said—. This is confidentiality, misuse of resources, and divorce with evidence.
At three in the afternoon, Human Resources formalized his dismissal for cause.
At four, the joint account was limited only to the money Alejandro had provably contributed.
At five, I sent him a folder by courier.
Inside were the divorce papers, the notice of employment termination, the inventory of assets, and the house deeds.
They didn’t take long to show up.
Alejandro arrived first, pale, sweating inside his gray suit jacket. Teresa came behind him, still wearing makeup, still proud, still believing she could force her way through with shouting.
—This is a disgrace! —she said in front of the door—. You’re going to destroy my son over a dress!
I stepped into the foyer with my arms crossed.
—It wasn’t because of a dress.
Alejandro swallowed.
—Mariana, let’s talk. My mother made a mistake, but you’re exaggerating.
I looked at him with cold sadness.
—Did I also exaggerate when you used the company card for hotels? When you shared my financial statements with her? When you tried to put your cousin in purchasing even though he didn’t meet the requirements?
Teresa opened her mouth, but for the first time, she found no words.
Alejandro lowered his gaze.
That was when I understood that fear had finally reached him.
Not because he was losing me.
Because he had been discovered.
Desperate, Teresa pointed at the door.
—This house belongs to my son too!
Then Valeria, who had arrived behind me, held out a copy of the deeds.
—No, ma’am. This house was never your son’s. It was only the address where he lived.
Teresa’s face changed.
All her arrogance cracked for a second.
But just when I thought she would leave in silence, she made her final mistake.
She looked at me with hatred and said:
—You don’t know who you’re messing with, Mariana. There are things about your company that still haven’t come to light.
Alejandro froze.
And I knew there was still something worse to uncover.
PART 3
I didn’t sleep that night.
Not because I was afraid of Teresa, but because of the way Alejandro had turned pale when she spoke of “things that still hadn’t come to light.” The next morning, I requested an urgent audit.
Three days later, my chief financial officer walked into my office with a red folder.
—Mariana, you need to see this.
What we found was lower than I had imagined.
Alejandro had not only shared confidential information with his mother. He had also been secretly negotiating with a competitor from Monterrey. He had given them data on routes, margins, clients, and costs. Not to formally sell the company, but to prepare his exit with a better position, presenting himself as the man who “really ran” Ruta Norte Logística.
And Teresa knew.
Worse still: she had bragged at family meals that Alejandro would soon “keep everything” or, at the very least, leave me “without control.”
The torn clothes had only been the first act of a humiliation they had spent months imagining.
When Valeria presented the evidence, Alejandro’s lawyer stopped threatening and started asking for settlements. The board of directors approved internal legal action. I didn’t make a spectacle. I didn’t need to. The documents spoke louder than any scream.
Two weeks later, I agreed to see Alejandro at a café in Colonia Roma. He arrived without an expensive watch, without the SUV, without that smile of a man used to being forgiven.