My mother-in-law tore my dress to humiliate me in my own kitchen; the next day, her son lost his job, the house, and the keys.

He didn’t love me as a partner. He used me as a safety net. And when his mother trampled me in my own kitchen, he chose not to lose his comfort.

—Can you give me a recommendation? —he asked with shame—. No one wants to hire me with this hanging over me.

I looked at him for a long time.

I remembered my torn dresses, the nights working while he showed off my achievements as if they were his own, Teresa’s voice saying that everything I owned belonged to her son.

—No, Alejandro.

His eyes filled with tears.

—Is that all?

—Yes. That’s all.

The divorce was finalized before the end of summer.

Alejandro got a lower-level job at a distribution warehouse in Toluca. Teresa had to leave the apartment that was paid for with the money he took from my company and move in with a sister in Naucalpan. Her friends, the ones she had told I was a kept woman, eventually found out the truth.

I kept my house, my company, and my peace.

I hired a new regional director, a woman named Sofía Rangel, who in one month corrected mistakes Alejandro had hidden for half a year. The numbers went up. The office breathed better. So did I.

The last time I saw Teresa was outside the courthouse. She carried the same expensive purse as always, but she no longer walked the same way. She looked at me as if she wanted to insult me. Then she saw Valeria, saw the folder in my hands, and shut her mouth.

I said nothing.

Some victories do not need shouting.

Sometimes justice sounds like a door getting a new lock, a card that stops working, and a woman who finally understands she does not have to apologize for owning her own life.