Two years after my husband divorced me and married my best friend, I was hiding under a bridge, freezing, my clothes clinging to my body and my pride shattered, when a luxurious black SUV suddenly braked in front of me. The back door opened and, to my horror, my wealthy father-in-law stepped out—pale, his voice trembling as he looked at me as if he were seeing a ghost and murmured, “Get in the car. They told me you were dead.”
Two years after my husband asked for a divorce—and barely three months later married my best friend—I was sleeping under a bridge over the Manzanares River. The damp concrete was my ceiling, a worn blanket my only possession. Madrid kept spinning above my head: cars, lights, distant laughter from terraces where, not long ago, I too had toasted with white wine and plans for the future.
That February night, the cold seeped into my bones. I had curled up against my backpack, trying to ignore the hunger, when I heard a car engine stop directly above where I was. Headlights filtered through the cracks of the bridge, a beam of white light in the dirty gloom.
Doors opening. Muffled voices. Then firm footsteps on the concrete, approaching the staircase that led down to “my” corner.
I sat up, tense. At that hour, nobody with good intentions came down there.
When I saw him, I thought I was hallucinating.
A tall man in an expensive wool coat, a perfectly knotted gray scarf, shoes that had never touched mud in their lives. The wind stirred his gray hair, but his presence remained intact—imposing.
“María…” his voice trembled for a second. “My God… it’s you.”
I swallowed.
“Don Ernesto…” I whispered.
Ernesto de la Torre, my former father-in-law. Javier’s father. Owner of half the real-estate sector in Madrid. A man who, two years earlier, had toasted at my wedding and referred to me as “the daughter I never had.”
The daughter who now smelled of smoke, dampness, and defeat.
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