She had been married for three years, and her husband slept in his mother’s room every night. One night she secretly followed him… and discovered a truth she would deeply regret…
From the day of her wedding, Sofia considered herself the luckiest woman in the world. Her husband, Ricardo, was a proper man. He left for work on time, spoke little, but was attentive. Everyone said:
— Sofia is so lucky to have married such a man.
But just a few weeks after the wedding, something unusual caught her attention.
Every night, just after she fell asleep, Ricardo would get up silently, tiptoe out of the room and go to the room of his mother, Elena, a widow for many years.
At first, Sofia was reassured. She thought her husband was just there to keep his elderly mother company, worried that she might be lonely.
But night after night —rain or shine, even during the cold nights of Mexico City— Ricardo would get up and go to his mother’s room.
Sofia finally asked him. Ricardo smiled sweetly and replied:
Mom is afraid of being alone at night. Don’t worry.
Three years passed, and that habit didn’t change. Little by little, Sofia began to feel like a stranger in her own home. On several occasions, her mother-in-law would speak to her in unfinished sentences:
— A man who knows how to love his mother is a blessing to his wife.
Sofia could only smile uncomfortably.
In everyone’s eyes, Ricardo was an exemplary son. But deep down, Sofía felt a profound unease.
One night, unable to sleep, he looked at the clock: two in the morning.
Again, the familiar sound of footsteps.
Ricardo discreetly left the room.
Sofia carefully opened the door, turned off the light, and walked down the hallway. A faint light filtered through the crack in her mother-in-law’s bedroom door. Then the door closed.
With his heart pounding, he pressed his ear to the door to listen.
From inside, Elena’s trembling voice could be heard:
— Ricardo… are you sure Sofia is asleep?
Sofia felt her heart clench violently. She remained motionless, holding her breath.
“Yes, Mom,” Ricardo replied softly. “Sleep soundly. Don’t worry.”
There was silence. Then, a long, painful sigh.
“I didn’t want this to last so long…” Elena murmured. “Three years… three years of lies.”
Sofia’s legs almost gave way.
Lies?
What are they talking about?
She felt a burning lump in her throat.
“We had no choice,” Ricardo replied. “You know very well what would happen if I discovered the truth.”
The truth.
Those words echoed in Sofia’s mind like thunder.
— Ricardo… —Elena continued, her voice breaking—, sometimes I wonder if I shouldn’t have told him from the beginning.
“No!” he replied immediately. “You promised me. She would never have agreed. And I… I wasn’t ready to lose you.”
Sofia put her hand to her mouth to stifle a sob.
Lose you?
Lose your mother?
The rustling of the sheets was heard. Then, a soft moan of pain.
— Sit down, Mom — Ricardo said tenderly. — Your breathing is still very weak.
Breathing?
Fear began to transform into confusion.
Sofia opened the door slightly, just enough to look inside.
What she saw left her frozen.
Elena sat on the bed, pale, her face sunken, connected to a small oxygen machine hidden behind the bedside table. Her hands trembled violently.
Ricardo, kneeling in front of her, held her hands as if he were caring for a sick child.
“It’s going to happen,” he whispered. “I’m here.”
A wave of embarrassment washed over Sofia… but something still didn’t add up.
Why lie for three years?
Why sleep there every night?
“You should go back to your wife,” Elena whispered. “She deserves better than this shadow.”
Ricardo lowered his head.
– Can’t.
“Why?” Elena asked weakly.
He remained silent.
— Ricardo… —his mother insisted.
Finally he murmured:
— Because if I’m not here… if I don’t watch over you every night… you could die in your sleep.
Sofia’s world was shaken.
“The doctors were clear,” she continued. “The respiratory failure worsens at night. You have crises. You almost died twice already… before our wedding.”
Elena closed her eyes, exhausted.
“I know,” he said. “That’s why I agreed to your sacrificing your marriage.”
Sacrifice.
That word stabbed Sofia’s heart.
She slowly returned to her room, with silent tears streaming down her face.
Three years.
Three years sharing her husband… with the fear of death.
The next morning, Ricardo went back to bed as if nothing had happened.
Sofia didn’t sleep.
At dawn, she got up, dressed, and waited for him in the kitchen.
When Ricardo entered, he stopped when he saw her.
— Are you awake yet?
She stared at him.
— In three years, Ricardo… how many nights have you actually slept with me?
He turned pale.
— Sofia…
– How many?
— Almost none.
Pain overwhelmed her.
— Why didn’t you tell me?
— Because I was afraid.
— Afraid of what?
— Of losing you.
She let out a bitter laugh.
— You’ve already lost me… every night you lied to me.
A heavy silence fell.
“I was never unfaithful to you,” he said quickly.
“I know,” she replied. “And perhaps that’s what hurts the most.”
He got up.
— I heard everything.
Ricardo looked at her in horror.
— Do you know about the illness?
— Yes. And also from the sacrifice they decided on without me.
— I wanted to protect you…
“No,” she interrupted. “You wanted to decide for me.”
He took a deep breath.
— Your mother is seriously ill. And you are a good son. But you have been an absent husband.
He nodded, devastated.
— I’ll do whatever it takes to fix it.
— Then start with the truth. The whole truth.
— The doctors say he might have a year left… two at most.
Sofia closed her eyes.
—And you don’t want to go to a clinic?
— No. She’s afraid of dying alone.
After a long silence, Sofia said:
— I’ll sleep in his room tonight.
Ricardo looked at her, surprised.
– That?
— I want to be there. With you. No lies. No closed doors.
– But…
— If our marriage is going to survive, it will be on truth. Otherwise, it’s already dead.
That night, Sofia sat next to Elena’s bed.
The old woman was crying.
— I stole your husband…
Sofia gently took his hand.
— No. The disease took him from both of us.
Months passed.
Sofia accompanied Elena to her medical appointments. She learned how to manage oxygen, nighttime crises, and silent fears.
For the first time, Ricardo saw his wife not as a victim… but as a source of strength.
One day, Elena asked to speak to Sofia alone.
“You are better than me,” he whispered. “You have loved without possessing.”
— I have learned —replied Sofia.
— Promise me something… when I’m gone, live life to the fullest. Don’t let it become a chain between you.
Sofia nodded through her tears.
Elena died peacefully weeks later, with Sofia’s hand in hers.
After the funeral, Ricardo broke down.
— I don’t know how to live without her…
Sofia hugged him.
— And I didn’t know how to live with you. Now… maybe we can learn together.
A year later, they renewed their vows.
Not in a church.
Not in front of a crowd.
In a small house, full of light.
Ricardo looked at her and said:
— This time, I choose you every night.
She smiled.
— And I choose the truth… even when it hurts.
MORAL:
Love is not just physical fidelity, but loyalty of the heart.
Secrets, even those born of love, always end up hurting.
True maturity is facing the truth together… or getting lost in solitude.

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