“Mariana, please… let’s talk privately.”
I let out a dry laugh.
“Oh no. Everyone gets to hear this. Because everyone came ready to celebrate in a house you and your mother were already planning to take from me.”
Whispers spread.
One aunt asked what I meant. A cousin muttered something under his breath. Ofelia began calling me ungrateful, exaggerating, claiming they had always treated me like family.
So I told them everything.
“Eight days ago, I caught Sergio searching through my property documents. Not casually—he was looking for exactly what you needed to transfer ownership. And I’m not guessing. My lawyer already has messages, recordings, and screenshots of your conversations.”
“Lies!” Ofelia shouted.
“Lies?” I said calmly. “Then what about the audio where you told him: ‘Once that house is in both your names, she’ll finally understand who’s in charge’?”
Chaos broke out.
Voices questioned her. Someone said her name sharply. Sergio whispered mine, defeated.
“My mom didn’t mean it like that…”
“I don’t care what she meant. I care that she said it. And that you agreed.”
The silence that followed was heavy, uncomfortable.
Then I added the final blow.
“And I didn’t change the locks just in case. I changed them because my house was broken into last week.”