Part 2: I sat on the cheap folding bed in the shed and made several calls.

Part 2: I sat on the cheap folding bed in the shed and made several calls.

“This villa was never yours, Diego. It was never your mother’s. I paid for it in cash, before we got married, and the deed is solely in my name. The cars in the garage? Also mine. The furniture? Mine. Even the Wi-Fi you’ve been using — mine.”

Doña Teresa appeared behind him, hair messy, face red with anger. “You can’t do this! This is my son’s house!”

“No, Teresa. This is my house. And from today, none of you are welcome here.”

I pressed a button on my phone. The front gate opened slowly.

Security guards I had called earlier walked in.

“You have one hour to remove all your things and your family. Anything left behind after that will be donated.”

Diego’s face turned pale. “Mariana… we’re married. You can’t just throw me out.”

I looked at him with genuine pity for the first time in years.

“You sent your wife to sleep in a shed so your mother could throw a party. You disrespected me in the home I bought with my own sweat. So yes, I can. And I just did.”

By 9 a.m., the trucks were loading again — this time to leave. Children cried. Relatives cursed. Doña Teresa stood in the driveway screaming threats until the guards escorted her out.

Diego tried one last time, standing in front of my car as I prepared to leave for the airport.

“I’ll change. I’ll make it right.”

I rolled down the window and said softly:

“You should have done that the moment your mother touched my mattress.”

Three months later, the divorce was finalized. I kept the villa, both cars, and everything I had worked for. Diego and his mother now live in a small rented apartment in the city. Doña Teresa no longer tells people her son “owns property in Valle de Bravo.”

Sometimes I sit on the balcony of my quiet villa with a glass of wine, looking at the garden I restored.

And I smile.

Never let anyone convince you that the house you built with your own hands belongs to someone else.

Especially not the people who would make you sleep in the shed.

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