THEY LAUGHED WHEN YOU SIGNED THE DIVORCE PAPERS… U…

Your father, Alejandro Mendoza, had built half the skyline Diego worshipped. Not literally, though sometimes it felt that way. Real estate, logistics, infrastructure, hospitality, private equity. The Mendoza name moved silently through the machinery of Mexico’s uppermost business circles like a current beneath dark water. Your father preferred control to publicity. He rarely gave interviews. He hated society pages. His companies sat behind holding structures complicated enough to make journalists tired. Wealth, in his philosophy, was strongest when it didn’t need applause.

You were his only child.

The public did not know that.

That secret had begun after your mother died when you were young, not in childbirth as Diego believed, but in a car accident the tabloids nearly turned into a carnival. Your father looked at what public attention did to grief and made a decision. He withdrew you. New schools under different names. Apartments instead of palaces. Security so discreet you barely noticed it until you were old enough to recognize the patterns. By the time you were eighteen, you could move through most of the city unrecognized if you dressed simply and kept your head down. You chose to keep living that way even after college began. It gave you something your father’s world never could.

Truth.

Or at least a better version of it.

When men met you without knowing your last name, they revealed themselves fast. Some became patronizing. Some flirted with the thrill of “saving” an ordinary girl. Some ignored you entirely. A rare few treated you like a person. Your father never interfered, though he watched. He considered it education.

Then came Diego.

Your father investigated him before the second date. Of course he did. He found the usual things. Aggression mistaken for leadership. Debt hidden behind growth projections. A talent for seducing investors with vision decks and carefully ironed confidence. Nothing criminal. Nothing disqualifying enough to forbid. Just enough to make Alejandro Mendoza’s jaw tighten when you defended him.

“He’s not perfect,” you said once over dinner.

“Neither is a loaded gun,” your father replied. “That doesn’t make it a decorative item.”

Still, he let you choose.

That was the bargain between you. He had spent years shielding you from predators who circled wealth. In exchange, once you were grown, he refused to turn protection into prison. If you wanted to live under another name and test the sincerity of the world, that was your right. If you wanted to date a man who mistook your simplicity for lack of options, that too was your right. He would advise. He would watch. But he would not control.

So you married Diego.

Quietly, legally, without revealing who you were.

He loved that version of the story. The startup prince marrying the modest, grateful woman who had “nothing but heart.” For the first six months, he played devotion convincingly. He bought you flowers, called you grounding, told friends you were the best decision he’d ever made because you weren’t “like those social-climbing women.” Every compliment carried a tiny insult directed at some imaginary class of women he resented. At the time, you mistook that for vulnerability.

Then NovaLink started growing faster.

With growth came investors, panels, interviews, invitations, galas, strategy dinners, longer hours, sharper moods. Diego’s tenderness began thinning at the edges. The first thing to disappear was curiosity. He stopped asking what you thought and started explaining what you should think. He corrected how you held a wineglass at a dinner you hadn’t even wanted to attend. He laughed once, lightly but not lightly enough, when you said a venture capitalist’s wife seemed kind.

“She’s being polite,” he said in the car afterward. “There’s a difference. You really need to learn how these rooms work.”

You turned toward the window and watched the city lights smear past.

He never noticed the expression on your face.