A Livestream Accused Her Of Betrayal. Then The Key Turned.-ruby - Chainityai

A Livestream Accused Her Of Betrayal. Then The Key Turned.-ruby

Mariana Ríos had been living in her brother Diego’s Narvarte apartment for three weeks when the knocking started. Not soft knocking. Not the kind a neighbor uses when asking for sugar or a missing package.

It was a hard, metallic pounding that shook the lock, rattled the hallway cabinet, and sent the cold of the dining-room tile up through Mariana’s bare feet before she had even stood.

The apartment still smelled of floor cleaner, fresh wood, and the coffee she had abandoned beside her university notes. Her final exams at the Faculty of Design were close, and the dining table had become her temporary studio.

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Diego Hernández had lent her the place while the house he was remodeling in San Ángel remained full of dust, contractors, paint cans, and half-installed kitchen tiles. Mariana had helped him choose nearly everything.

The sofa cushions, the lamps, the curtains, the tile samples, and the kitchen fixtures had all passed through her hands. Diego trusted her eye, and Mariana loved him for trusting it.

Their history was complicated only to strangers. Mariana carried her mother’s last name, Ríos. Diego carried Hernández. They shared a mother, childhood holidays, hospital corridors, and the quiet aftermath of the same woman’s death.

When their mother died, Mariana received a small account and a folder of documents no young woman should have had to understand alone. Diego became the person who checked the bank forms twice.

He never treated her like a burden. He treated her like his sister. That distinction would matter, though Camila refused to hear it when the door opened.

Mariana thought the pounding might be the plant delivery she had scheduled online. The confirmation was still on the table, next to her sketchbook, student ID, and the blue folder for Diego’s San Ángel remodel.

Instead, a tall woman with flat-ironed hair and red lipstick stood in the hallway, surrounded by five other women. One of them held a phone with a ring light clipped to it.

The white glare hit Mariana’s face before the first accusation did. “Look at her carefully,” the woman shouted. “This is my husband’s mistress.”

The sentence was not spoken like a question. It was spoken like a verdict already typed, stamped, and sent to the crowd waiting inside that phone.

Mariana tried to close the door. She said they had the wrong apartment. She said it with the controlled voice people use when fear has not yet decided whether it will become panic.

They shoved in anyway. Camila introduced herself as Diego Hernández’s wife and accused Mariana of taking his money, his rent, his furniture, and the life that belonged to her.

“Diego is my brother,” Mariana said.

The women laughed. The one filming tilted the phone higher, inviting the livestream to judge Mariana before Mariana could reach the person who could prove the truth.

Her own phone was on the dining table. Mariana moved toward it, but one of Camila’s friends grabbed it first. Fingernails dug into Mariana’s wrist and left crescent marks.

“No calling for help,” the woman said.

In that instant, the apartment stopped feeling like shelter. It became a set. The ring light, the comments, the strangers watching from behind screens, the furniture Diego had trusted her to receive.

Camila dragged Mariana toward the living room and asked if Diego paid for her rent, her clothes, and her furniture. The words were loud enough for the phone and cruel enough for the comments.

Mariana tried again. Her voice shook, but the meaning did not. Her mother had left her money before dying. Diego only looked after her because she was his sister.

Camila slapped her.

The sound was not theatrical. It was flat and clean, the kind of sound that makes everyone in a room understand what happened and then decide what kind of person they are going to be.

No one chose Mariana.

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