And little by little, I found myself looking forward to our appointments.
Not because I was scared.
Because I felt safe.
Meanwhile, I heard almost nothing from Rodrigo.
No apology.
No explanation.
No attempt to ask how I was doing.
The only thing I received was a formal email from his attorney finalizing the divorce.
Eleven years together.
Reduced to paperwork.
It hurt.
But each day hurt a little less.
Then one afternoon, everything changed.
I was helping William organize old boxes in his study when I discovered a wooden case tucked behind a cabinet.
Inside were dozens of photographs.
Most were faded.
Some dated back decades.
But one picture made my entire body freeze.
My hands started shaking.
I stared at the photograph.
A younger William stood smiling beside another man.
A man with kind eyes.
A man I knew immediately.
My father.
“Dad…” I whispered.
William looked over.
The moment he saw the photograph, tears filled his eyes.
“You recognize him.”
I could barely speak.
“That’s David Beltran.”
William slowly sat down.
“Your father was my best friend.”
I felt like the room tilted.
My father had died when I was sixteen.
All my life, I had been told he left very little behind.
Just memories.
Just stories.
Nothing more.
But William shook his head.
“No,” he said quietly. “That’s not true.”
Over the next two hours, he told me a story no one had ever told me before.
Years earlier, he and my father had started a medical supply company together.
They had built it from nothing.
When my father became ill, he arranged for part of his ownership to be placed in a trust fund for me.
But after his death, legal complications and interference from distant relatives buried the documents.
William spent years trying to locate me.
Years.
But somehow, every lead disappeared.
Until now.
Until the night my husband threw me out.
The irony was almost unbelievable.
Rodrigo believed he was discarding a woman with nothing.
Instead, he had thrown away someone connected to a substantial inheritance she didn’t even know existed.
When William finished explaining everything, neither of us spoke for a long time.
Then he reached across the table and squeezed my hand.
“You’re family, Mariana.”
I burst into tears.
Not because of the inheritance.
Not because of the money.