Part 2:

 

Lucía let the cloth fall with an almost ceremonial slowness.

Below, there was no scandal.

There was no show.

There was truth.

Her skin, exposed without drama, spoke for itself. They weren’t recent wounds or exaggerated marks. They were subtle signs, accumulated over years: tension in her shoulders, stiffness in her back, calloused hands, arms marked by constant work. She wasn’t a victim… she was living proof.

The silence in the room became unbearable.

—Here I am—Lucía said, without raising her voice—. The “workhorse”.

Nobody moved.

—For nineteen years—he continued—I got up before everyone else and went to bed after everyone else. Not out of legal obligation… but because I believed in a project that was also mine.

Her eyes were fixed on Álvaro.

—But on paper… I didn’t exist.

Álvaro tried to compose himself.

“This is pure theater,” he murmured, but his voice was weak. “It proves nothing.”

Lucia turned her head slightly.

—No. This proves nothing.

He paused.

—That’s why I brought this.

Mercedes stepped forward and placed a thick folder on the court table.

The judge nodded.

—Proceed.

Lucia took a deep breath.

—Accounting records for the last fifteen years, signed by me. Transfers from personal accounts to cover company expenses. Contracts with suppliers negotiated by me, without legal recognition. Photographs, employee testimonials, tax returns where my work appears… but my name does not.

Each word fell like a dry blow.

—And here —he added, pulling out one last document—, an independent audit that shows that more than sixty percent of the business growth directly coincides with operational decisions that I made.

A murmur rippled through the room.

Álvaro turned pale.

“That’s… manipulable,” he tried to say.

“Manipulated?” the judge repeated, raising an eyebrow. “He will have the opportunity to formally challenge it.”

But the balance had already been broken.

Lucia stepped forward.

—You said I was easy to manage.

He looked at her, now without a trace of gentleness.

—No. I chose to stay.

Another silence.

Heavier.

More definitive.

—I chose to believe. I chose to build. I chose to sustain something you were never able to acknowledge.

Her voice did not tremble.

—But today… I choose something else.

Mercedes closed the folder precisely.

—We request recognition of my client’s active participation in the creation and development of the assets, as well as the corresponding compensation in accordance with the law.

The judge paused for a few seconds before speaking.

Enough to settle the full weight of the moment.

—This court has heard.

He looked at Lucía. Then at Álvaro.

—And this court has seen.

The audience got up minutes later, but nobody left the same.

Two weeks later, the resolution was issued.

Full recognition of Lucia’s economic and operational contribution.

Significant compensation.

Participation in the assets generated during the marriage.

And something else that wasn’t written in any document…

I respect.

Álvaro did not appeal.

Not because I didn’t want to.

But because, for the first time, she had nothing to hold on to.

The business, as he knew it, no longer belonged entirely to him.

And the narrative he had built up over years… had crumbled in a single morning.

Lucía left the courthouse without haste.

The air in Guadalajara seemed different to him.

Cleaner.

More yours.

Mercedes was walking beside him.

“He was brave,” he said.

Lucia shook her head gently.

—No. It was too late.

He paused for a moment, looking at the sky.

—But enough.

That night, at home, he served himself a cup of coffee.

Hot.

Don’t worry.

Without trembling in the hands.

And for the first time in many years…

I didn’t know exactly what would come next.

And he didn’t care.

Because it was no longer a “beast of burden”.

She was the woman who decided to stop being one.

And that… changed everything.

 

END.