His Pregnant Mistress Demanded My Three-Story House—Then I Showed The Deed-ruby - Chainityai

His Pregnant Mistress Demanded My Three-Story House—Then I Showed The Deed-ruby

My husband’s pregnant mistress came into my living room and asked me to leave my own three-story house.

By the time she said it, the room had already gone too quiet. The ceiling fan kept turning. The late afternoon light kept sliding across the tile. Outside, Narvarte looked ordinary — buses in the distance, a neighbor’s gate clanging shut, the smell of someone frying onions down the block — but inside my house, every breath felt measured.

I am Marisol Herrera, and for six years I believed I was building a marriage, not guarding a property title.

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Rodrigo Salcedo and I married in Puebla in a small ceremony my mother insisted on making beautiful anyway. The tables were covered with white cloths. The mariachis played until midnight. My mother arranged the flowers herself because she said a life should begin with hands that care. Rodrigo cried when he saw me walking toward him. People love to remember that part of a wedding — the tears, the music, the promise. They forget the quieter part, where promises become routine and routine becomes the thing that either holds two people together or reveals how little they ever meant it.

My mother, Doña Carmen, gave me the house in Mexico City in my name alone. She did it for love, but also for wisdom. She had seen too many women lose their homes because they confused devotion with safety. On the day we signed the escritura, she made me read every line.

—An open heart is good, hija —she told me—. An open title is dangerous.

Rodrigo laughed then. He said it did not matter because everything belonged to both of us in spirit. I believed him because that is what people do when they are trying to build a future with someone they love. They hand over trust before they know it can be used against them.

The house itself was not grand by magazine standards, but to me it felt immense. Three floors. Black balcony rails. A broad kitchen. A terrace that caught the evening wind. The walls were white enough to reflect the afternoon sun, and the rooms had that clean, slightly cool smell of tile after mopping. I furnished it slowly, buying pieces on payments, choosing a blue dish set from a street market, a secondhand sofa, a shelf for our wedding photo.

It was not luxury. It was mine.

That mattered more than I knew.

Rodrigo changed the way betrayals usually do: gradually, then all at once. He began coming home late. He placed his phone face down on the table. He smiled too quickly when I asked who he was texting. Then he started treating my questions as if they were insults.

When I worked overtime at the bank, I told myself he was simply stressed. When he stopped sitting with me on the terrace at night, I told myself every marriage had seasons. When Doña Elvira began criticizing my housekeeping, my cooking, my hours, my job, I told myself that resentment was not the same as disaster.

I was wrong about that.

The problem with resentment is that it often arrives wearing a family face. It sits at your table. It eats your food. It tells the story of your own home as if it is already being narrated by someone else.

Doña Elvira liked to speak as though she were giving advice instead of permission to be cruel. She would run a finger over the counter and make a face at the slightest speck.

—A wife who works too much neglects her home.

She said it so often that I began to hear it before she opened her mouth.

I worked because bills do not pay themselves. I worked because I liked earning money with my own hands. I worked because the mortgage, the taxes, the repairs, the groceries, the bills for the water heater and the terrace leak and the broken lock on the second-floor window all seemed to know my name more than Rodrigo’s. But I kept those thoughts to myself because I still believed that if I stayed steady enough, the marriage would steady with me.

Then Rodrigo came home one night and sat across from me without taking his tie off.

The fan was clicking above us. The kitchen smelled faintly of the soup I had made and never finished eating. He looked exhausted, but not from work. He looked exhausted in the way people do when they have already decided what part of the truth they intend to tell first.

—There is another woman —he said.

I waited.

—She is pregnant with my child.

I remember the refrigerator hum. I remember the warm edge of the ceramic mug in my hand. I remember that my body did not react the way people imagine betrayal should make it react. I did not collapse. I did not scream. I simply sat there and let the sentence take its full shape in the room.

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