May be an image of child and hospital

“Your stepmother isn’t in debt by chance,” she whispered.

I felt my heart pounding in my ribs.

-What do you mean?

Eduardo slowly let go of me and stood up in front of me.

Standing.

Without hesitation.

“The accident wasn’t an accident,” he said in a low voice. “It was an attempted murder.”

The air became thick.

—What are you talking about?

She walked to the window. Her steps were firm.

—Five years ago I discovered financial irregularities in one of our companies. Hidden transfers. Misappropriation of funds. When I started investigating… my car lost its brakes on the highway.

I swallowed.

—And you survived?

—By centimeters.

He turned towards me.

—But someone needed the world to believe I was incapacitated. That’s how I ceased to be a threat.

My mind was trying to put the pieces together.

-Who?

Her eyes didn’t blink.

—Partners. Competitors. And someone closer than you think.

A chill ran through me.

—No.

—Your stepmother worked as a financial intermediary for one of the companies that tried to drain our company.

I felt the walls closing in.

—That’s impossible.

—No, she isn’t. When your father started having financial problems, she was already involved. She knew that if I reappeared publicly, many secrets would come to light.

—So marriage…?

—It was a double play.

He looked at me intensely.

—She thought that by marrying me she could keep an eye on me from the inside. Keep me under control. Make sure I never got up from that chair.

The ground seemed to tilt.

—But you could get up.

—I always could.

Five years of pretending.

Five years listening to conversations, observing movements, collecting evidence while everyone believed he was defeated.

“Why did you agree to marry me?” I asked.

He didn’t look away.

—Because I knew you weren’t part of the plan.

—How can you be so sure?

—I investigated you.

I felt a mixture of anger and relief.

—Did you investigate me?

—I had to do it. I couldn’t take the risk.

He approached slowly.

—I discovered that you paid for your studies with scholarships. That you worked while you studied. That you didn’t touch a single penny of the money your stepmother handled.

My breathing was still irregular.

—So I’m… what? A pawn?

—You were the piece she thought she controlled.

His tone changed.

—But now you decide which side you’re on.

A long silence enveloped us.

All my life I had obeyed out of guilt. Out of fear of losing everything.

Now I was faced with a truth that could destroy my family.

“If what you say is true,” I whispered, “my father…”

—Your father signed documents he didn’t read. He trusted her.

I closed my eyes.

The image of Márcia saying “Love doesn’t pay the bills” echoed in my head.

Perhaps for her, only the accounts existed.

I opened my eyes.

—What do you need from me?

A hint of a smile crossed her face.

—Access.

-That?

—To your stepmother’s private meetings. To her calls. To her movements.

I felt the weight of the decision.

—And what if I refuse?

He didn’t hesitate.

—Then this marriage will be exactly what she planned: a cage.

I walked to the bed and sat down.

My life had changed in one night.

She was not married to an invalid.

She was married to a strategist.

“If I help you,” I finally said, “I want the whole truth. No secrets.”

—You’ll have it.

—And when everything comes to light… my father can’t go down with her.

Eduardo nodded.

—It is not my goal to destroy innocent people.

During the following weeks, I played the role Márcia expected. The obedient wife. The naive young woman who lived in a mansion believing that her husband depended on others for everything.

But at night, Eduardo would walk.

He paced his office. He reviewed documents. He drew up plans.

We discovered hidden transfers to accounts linked to the alleged accident. Electronic signatures. Encrypted emails.

And Márcia’s name appeared far too often.

One night, I intercepted a conversation.

“The boy doesn’t suspect a thing,” she said on the phone. “He’s still in his chair. Carolina is where she’s supposed to be.”

I felt a twinge in my chest.

Where it belongs.

I recorded the call.

The day of the confrontation arrived sooner than expected.

Eduardo called a family meeting at the Figueiredo family’s main mansion. Partners, lawyers, my father… and Márcia.

She entered confidently.

Elegant.

Calculator.

“To what do we owe our honor?” he asked with a measured smile.

Eduardo looked at her from his chair.

—Truthfully.

And then he stood up.

The silence was absolute.

My father turned pale.

Márcia didn’t react immediately. But her eyes hardened.

Eduardo played the recordings. He showed documents. Transfers. Evidence of the sabotage on his vehicle.

The house of cards began to collapse.

“This is a farce,” she tried to say.

But the evidence was solid.

My father looked at her as if he were seeing her for the first time.

-It’s true?

She did not answer.

Silence was his confession.

The consequences were swift. Formal investigations. Accounts frozen. Legal proceedings.

My father was cleared of charges after proving that he signed under false pretenses.

Márcia lost much more than money.

He lost control.

That night, when it was all over, I returned to the bedroom where weeks before I had discovered the lie about the chair.

Eduardo was standing by the window.

“It’s over,” he said.

I looked at him.

—Not entirely.

He turned towards me.

-What do you mean?

—I still don’t know if I trust you.

He wasn’t offended.

He nodded.

—That’s fair.

I approached slowly.

—Five years of faking a disability… that’s also manipulation.

—It was survival.

-Maybe.

The silence was no longer tense.

He was honest.

“And now?” I asked.

Eduardo took one step closer.

—Now we decide if this marriage remains an agreement… or something different.

I observed him.

I no longer saw an invalid.

Not just to a strategist.

I saw a man who had survived just like me.

“Love doesn’t pay the bills,” I murmured.

He raised an eyebrow.

—And what does he pay?

I stared at him.

-The truth.

I didn’t know if what we had would turn into love.

But I did know one thing for sure:

He was no longer a piece in anyone’s game.

And this time… I would choose my own rules.