Sold as a Replacement Wife, She Took the Wedding Mic With Proof-ruby - Chainityai

Sold as a Replacement Wife, She Took the Wedding Mic With Proof-ruby

Mariana Ortega grew up in a family that knew how to make sacrifice sound beautiful.

Her mother called it loyalty. Her father called it responsibility. Valeria, her younger sister, never had to call it anything at all, because Mariana had always been the one expected to absorb the cost.

In their house in Coyoacán, Valeria was protected from bad news, sharp words, heavy chores, and consequences. Mariana learned early that love could be distributed like inheritance, and she had been left with the smallest share.

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When the Ortega family company began failing, the old rules became crueler. Creditors called. Meetings ran late. Her father stopped answering certain numbers, and her mother began speaking in whispers behind closed doors.

The Montes family offered a rescue that looked elegant on paper. If one Ortega daughter honored the engagement to Sebastián Montes, millions would be invested into the collapsing company.

The problem was Sebastián had been engaged to Valeria.

After the accident that left Sebastián blind, Valeria changed. She cried in her bedroom. She told everyone she was too young, too fragile, too frightened to spend her life caring for a man who could not see her.

Mariana had been in love with someone else then. It was not a grand romance, but it was honest. He knew how she took her coffee, knew when she was lying about being tired, and had once promised her a life that belonged to them.

Her parents ended that life in one conversation.

Her mother told her not to be selfish. Her father reminded her the family had paid for everything she had ever had. Valeria stood nearby, pale and silent, accepting rescue without looking at the person being sacrificed.

Mariana entered the Montes mansion in Las Lomas wearing white, but she did not feel like a bride. She felt like collateral.

The house was enormous, cold, and polished to the point of accusation. Marble floors reflected her footsteps. Staff watched her with quiet curiosity. Sebastián’s mother looked her up and down as if inspecting a substitute product.

“She is the replacement wife,” the woman said once, not quietly enough to be accidental.

Sebastián did not defend her.

In the first months, he barely spoke unless he needed something. He asked for water, medicine, clothes, documents, appointments. At night, when pain made him restless, he said Valeria’s name in his sleep.

Mariana learned the layout of his darkness. The bathroom tiles that became slick after a shower. The medicine drawer arranged by touch. The exact tone in his voice that meant humiliation was about to become anger.

Then came the implant.

Sebastián insisted they could not risk a pregnancy “at the wrong time.” He did not ask what she wanted. He arranged the appointment, paid the clinic, and expected obedience.

Her body rejected it. Fever came first, then infection, then a hospital room where fluorescent light made her skin look gray. A doctor explained complications in careful language and left Mariana holding a future that had been damaged without consent.

The medical file stayed with her.

Hospital intake forms. Treatment notes. A discharge summary. Later, the specialist’s warning that motherhood might never happen for her naturally. Mariana kept every page in a folder because paperwork had become the only witness that did not look away.

Still, she stayed.

Her mother told her not to anger the Montes family. Her father said she owed them gratitude. Valeria sent occasional messages full of hearts and shallow concern, never asking what it felt like to sleep beside the man she had abandoned.

Some families do not abandon daughters loudly. They dress the sacrifice in duty, call the wound gratitude, and expect you to thank them for the knife.

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