“Goodnight, darling,” my husband, Javier, whispered, kissing my forehead as always. I closed my eyes and waited. I’d suspected for almost three weeks that he was sedating me.
Every morning I woke up groggy, with a dry mouth, a headache, and the feeling that I’d wasted hours of my life. He always had an explanation: stress, anemia, exhaustion. He even insisted on going with me to the doctor and vouching for me.
Too attentive. Too proper.
Barely ten minutes had passed when I heard the bedroom door open again. “She’s asleep,” Javier murmured.
The mattress dipped slightly, as if someone else had entered. I opened my eyes just enough to see a silhouette behind him. It was my sister-in-law, Lucía.
A brutal chill ran through my body. I didn’t understand what she was doing there at midnight. I held my breath.
“Hurry up,” she said softly.
“We can’t keep doing this much longer.”
Javier went to my closet. I heard the clang of a box and the rustling of papers. “I just need to find the original document,” he replied.
“Without it, the house is still in both our names.”
It took me a few seconds to understand. They weren’t looking for hidden money. They weren’t having an affair right in front of me.
They were looking for my documents: the deed to the house I’d inherited from my father, my bank statements, my insurance file. The real reason for the pills hit me like a ton of bricks.
Lucía opened my bedside table and took out my laptop. “The password doesn’t work.”
“Try the date of your father’s death,” Javier said without hesitation.
My stomach clenched.
He knew my passwords. He knew my routines. He knew my weaknesses.
And suddenly, I also understood why, in recent months, he had insisted so much that I sign “unimportant” papers, why he wanted to sell the house, why he isolated me from my friends, saying that I was sensitive and confused.
Then Lucia said something that left me speechless.
“Once we’re finished with the transfer, you’ll have to admit her to the clinic. If she’s still here, she can find out.”
And at that moment, Javier responded with a coldness I had never heard from him before:
“If he doesn’t sign willingly tomorrow, we’ll make it look like an outbreak.”
I had to make a superhuman effort not to sit up abruptly. My heart was pounding so hard I thought they could hear it.
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