
A desperate maid surrendered herself to her wealthy employer to save her ailing mother. But after that one night, he made a decision that would change his life forever.
The night smelled of rain and regret.
Lucía Morales stood in front of the mansion’s doorway, her thin, soaked skirt clutching the cell phone that had just delivered the worst news of her life. Her mother’s condition had worsened.
The hospital demanded more than three hundred thousand pesos for the surgery: money I didn’t have, money I couldn’t even imagine getting.
For years, Lucía had scrubbed floors, polished marble, and carried trays through the hallways of people who learned her name. The Torres family was one of the richest in Mexico City.
And her patriarch, Alejandro Torres—a widowed businessman with silver hair and a sharp gaze—was the man who had met her three years before. He was cold but proper.
Distant but observant. The kind of man who was aware of everything, but almost never got involved. Family games
That night, as the storm brewed over the city, Lucía made a decision that burned within her. She would ask for help. Not as an employee. As a woman who had nothing left to lose.
Inside the office, Alejandro looked up from his laptop when she stepped out, trembling, letting drops of water fall onto the thick carpet.
—Lucía? —his tone was firm, confused—. What’s wrong?
Her voice broke.
—It’s my mom. She needs an operation urgently. Please, Mr. Alejandro, I’ll do anything… anything for the money.
The silence that followed was long and suffocating. Her eyes darkened, as if she were weighing something inside. Then, with a calm that froze her, she asked:
—Do you understand what you’re offering me?
She nodded, tears falling down her face.

-Yes sir.
Everything happened quickly, in silence, as if either of the two wanted to remember it.
When it was over, Lucía felt empty: violated by the situation and at the same time complicit, all at once. He extended a check to look her in the eyes.
“For your mother,” he said in a hollow voice. “I will make sure she receives the best care.”
Lucía left the house before dawn, her hands trembling and her dignity fading in the darkness. She swore never to see him again.
But two weeks later, he called her.
—Lucía—Alejandro said into the phone, with an unreadable tone—. We need to talk. I’ve done something… and it’s going to change everything.
Her stomach froze.
“What does he mean?” she whispered.
His response sounded like a deliberate confession.
—I asked my lawyer to include you in my will.
And, at that moment, Lucia’s world began to crumble again… this time, in a way that Lucia could have imagined.
Lucía responded for several seconds. She remained motionless in her small kitchen, the telephone glued to her ear, her heart beating in her chest.
“What… what did he say?” he murmured.
—I have added you to my will—repeated Alejandro, with a serene tone, almost in a businesslike manner. —You will receive a share of my estate. It is the least I can do.
Lucia clung to the top to avoid falling.
—Doп Alejaпdro, why… why would I do something like that?
He doubted a moment.
—Because I owe you more than money. Because I can’t stop thinking about that night. About you.
Lucia’s stomach contracted.

“Please,” she said softly. “That night was a mistake. I did it for my mother, for…”
“I know,” he interrupted. “But I can’t delete it. Nor do I want to.”
Lucía hung up before she could say anything else.
Her mother’s surgery had gone well. The hospital bills were paid, thanks to him. But every time Lucía looked at her mother’s face, calm and happy during her recovery, guilt crushed her chest.
She wanted to confess everything, to tell him what she had done, but the words remained trapped in her throat.
The weeks passed. Lucia returned to her job at the Torres mansion. She found employment at a residence for friends, trying to start over.
But one afternoon, as he left after a long tour, a black silk stopped beside him. Alejandro got out of the car. He looked older, paler.
—I tried to call you —he said—. You don’t answer.
—Because there’s nothing to say —she replied, without looking at him straight on.
“There’s too much to say.” He took a step toward her. “Lucía, I’m sick.”
His eyes opened suddenly.
—¿Qυé?
—Pancreatic cancer. Stage four. They told me two months ago —his voice barely broke—. I have less than a year left.
The words struck her like a stone.
“I haven’t told anyone,” he began. “Not my daughter, nor even the lawyer until recently. But I asked him to leave the will in order. Lucia, you deserve…”
“No,” she interrupted. “Don’t you dare say I deserve anything. I sold my body for money. That doesn’t make me deserving of anything. It makes me desperate.”

Alejandro’s eyes softened with something akin to pain.
—Do you think I don’t know? I think about that night every day. Not because of what happened, but because I realized too late what it meant to both of us.
She looked at him, unable to speak. For a long moment, he moved. The autumn wind blew around him, carrying the sound of traffic and dry leaves.
—I don’t want your money —Lucía pleaded, her voice trembling—. I just want my life back.
He nodded slowly, as if he had been expecting that answer. Then he said something that left her frozen.
—You already got it back. And soon, you’ll have mine too.
Three months later, Alejandro Torres died.
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