A Lottery Win Led Jimena to Her Husband's Office—and His Secret-ruby - Chainityai

A Lottery Win Led Jimena to Her Husband’s Office—and His Secret-ruby

Jimena Ortega was thirty-two, living in Mexico City, and accustomed to making small things stretch. A kilo of rice. A tired smile. A marriage that had begun warmly and slowly become a house full of swallowed questions.

Her husband, Alvaro Medina, directed a small construction company in Polanco. According to him, the company was always one bad invoice away from disaster. Materials were expensive, permits were impossible, payroll devoured everything, and debt waited behind every door.

Jimena believed him because love had trained her to. When he came home late with a sharp tone and a stale smell of stress on his clothes, she made excuses for him before he even spoke.

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She had left her work as an administrative assistant when Emiliano was born. Their son was three, bright-eyed, and small enough to still believe a plastic truck could fix any bad day if pushed hard enough across the floor.

For Jimena, motherhood became the center of the world. She cooked, cleaned, soothed, ironed, and built her hours around naps, meals, and Alvaro’s moods. She told herself endurance was another language for love.

That belief had a cost. Every time Alvaro raised his voice over nothing, she forgave him. Every time he spoke of money with theatrical despair, she lowered her expectations. Every time her dreams surfaced, she folded them away again.

Everything changed on a Tuesday morning after rain. Jimena found a National Lottery ticket tucked among shopping receipts, almost forgotten. She had bought it from an elderly woman at a small shop while waiting for a shower to pass.

She bought it out of compassion, not hope. The paper had stayed in her purse, soft at the corners, until that morning when Emiliano was playing with his toy cars and the apartment smelled of wet pavement through the open window.

She opened the official site casually, almost laughing at herself. Five. Twelve. Twenty-three. The numbers looked familiar, but not real. Then came thirty-four, forty-five, and the additional number: five.

Jimena checked once. Then again. Then a third time, with her pulse suddenly so loud it seemed to fill the whole apartment. Her phone slipped from her shaking hand and struck the cold tile.

Fifty million pesos. The phrase did not feel like language at first. It felt like weather, like a door bursting open, like the future arriving too fast for her lungs to catch up.

She did not imagine diamonds or beaches. She imagined Emiliano in a better school. She imagined a house with wide windows and safe locks. She imagined Alvaro’s face when the supposed burden of debt lifted from his shoulders.

That was why she ran. With the ticket in the hidden pocket of her purse and Emiliano balanced against her hip, Jimena took a taxi to Polanco, thinking she was carrying salvation to her husband.

The taxi smelled of vinyl seats, rain-warmed concrete, and exhaust. Emiliano pressed his cheek against her shoulder. Jimena kept one hand over her purse as if the thin piece of paper inside might fly away.

At the construction office, the receptionist greeted her politely. Jimena asked not to be announced. She wanted to surprise Alvaro. She wanted his first reaction to be pure, unguarded joy.

The door to his office was not closed. Light cut across the hallway. Jimena lifted her hand to knock and stopped when she heard a woman’s laugh, low and intimate enough to make her skin tighten.

Then Alvaro spoke in a voice she barely recognized. It was soft, affectionate, almost playful. It was the kind of voice she had begged for in silence and not heard at home for years.

“Almost ready, my love,” he said. “I just need that dumbass to sign the papers, and she’ll walk out of my life without a penny.”

Jimena did not breathe. Emiliano shifted in her arms, warm and trusting, while the words settled over her with the weight of something final. The woman answered, and Jimena recognized Renata immediately.

Renata was not a stranger. She was a supposed friend of Alvaro’s sister, a woman who had eaten in Jimena’s home, smiled at her table, and acted harmless while sitting close enough to study the walls.

“What if she suspects?” Renata asked. Alvaro laughed with a confidence that made Jimena’s stomach turn. He said Jimena understood nothing. He said he would invent bankruptcy, huge debt, and a protective divorce.

Then he said she would swallow it all because she always did. The cruelty was not shouted. It was worse. It was casual, polished, clean, as if he were discussing a contract clause.

Jimena felt something crack inside her, not loudly but completely. She had arrived with a miracle in her purse and found a trap waiting behind a half-open office door.

The worst came next. Alvaro said that if he wanted to get Emiliano back afterward, he would. Totally, he said, Jimena could not keep the child alone.

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