The baby shower decorations were still everywhere. Half-deflated balloons leaned against the hedges. Trash bags full of paper plates sat near the garage. Inside, the cake remained untouched on the counter, as if the house itself had stopped breathing after I left.
I packed my jewelry, my grandmother’s letters, my passport, and every document from the home office safe. Then I stood in the nursery doorway one last time and looked at the crib. The room smelled like fresh paint and theft.
By five o’clock, Miguel’s clothes were boxed in the garage. The locks were changed. Leah stood in the driveway holding the file.
When Miguel’s SUV turned the corner, Rosa was in the passenger seat and Carmen in the back.
He parked abruptly, stepped out, and froze when he saw the movers.
What is this? he demanded.
Leah handed him the papers before I spoke.
This is service, she said. And this house is not yours.
Rosa started shouting immediately, calling me bitter, unstable, heartless. She asked how I could do this to a pregnant woman. I might have laughed if I weren’t so exhausted. Carmen stayed by the car at first, one hand on her belly, staring at the front door as if realizing she had never truly belonged there.
Miguel tried another tactic. He approached me, lowering his voice, putting on sorrow like a coat. Ana, don’t do this in front of everyone. We can work this out.
I held up printed copies of the bank transfers.
You painted a nursery for your mistress with my money, I said. In my house. There is nothing to work out.
Carmen’s head snapped toward him. My money? she asked.
He turned too slowly, and that brief hesitation told her more than any answer could.
That evening, she texted me from an unknown number asking to meet. Every sensible instinct told me to ignore it. But curiosity is stubborn when your life has been rewritten without your consent.
We met two days later at a coffee shop across town. Carmen looked exhausted, swollen, and suddenly younger than her thirty-two years. She wore no makeup. She twisted a paper napkin in her hands until it tore.
Miguel told me your marriage had been over for a long time, she said. He said you stayed together for appearances and because the house belonged to both of you. He said you knew about me. Not everything, not the pregnancy at first, but that you knew the marriage was finished.
I looked at her.
Then I slid a copy of the deed across the table.