He stood still… with that expression of a man who has just lost control and has no idea when it happened.
“You have no right to go through my things,” he finally said, but he no longer sounded firm.
“And you had no right to use my last name with another woman,” I replied without raising my voice.
Silence. Heavy. The kind that can no longer be filled with excuses.
I stood up slowly. Not to confront him, but to create distance.
“Did you go with her because she was sick… or because it was convenient for you?” I asked.
“It’s not what you think.”
“It never is,” I interrupted, “until it is.”
Diego ran a hand through his hair. “Camila needed support.”
I let out a laugh. “And did that support include a king-sized bed, champagne, and turning off your phone?”
He didn’t answer. Again. Always the silence when there’s no longer a lie that can hold up.
I walked over to the laptop. I opened it. I turned the screen toward him.
“I read the full result.”
That was when his breathing changed.
“You shouldn’t have…”
“I shouldn’t have what? Found out? Protected myself?”
Pause.
“Or ruined your story?”
He took a step closer. He hesitated. “Mariana… I didn’t know what to do.”
“Yes, you did.” I looked him straight in the eye. “You chose to stay silent.”
Pause.
“You chose to come back.”
Another pause.
“And you chose to touch me without telling me anything.”
That one actually hurt him. I saw it.
“Nothing happened when I got back,” he said quickly.
“And you expected me to believe you?”
Silence.
“Because I’m the one who had to trust you,” I added, “without knowing a thing.”
He sat down. Finally. As if the weight had finally crashed down on him.
“What exactly does it say?” he asked.
There it was. The fear. Real. Raw. Not fear for our marriage—fear of the consequences.
I looked at him. I made him wait. Just as I had waited. Just as I had opened that file all alone.
“No,” I said at last.
“No, what?”
“I’m not going to tell you.”
He stood up abruptly. “Mariana!”
“Because you did know.”
Pause.
“And even then, you decided not to say anything to me.”
He froze. And for the first time… he didn’t have a quick way out. He had no control. No persona. Just fear.
“What if it’s serious?” he whispered.
“Then you should have thought of that before.”
I walked toward the door.
“Where are you going?”
“To do what you didn’t.”
“What?”
I opened the door. “To take care of myself.”
“Mariana…” his voice was no longer arrogant. “Are you okay?”
I stopped. That question came late. Very late. I barely turned my head.
“That is no longer your concern.”
I walked out. And this time… I wasn’t carrying pain. I was carrying clarity. And that… that is much more dangerous than any scandal.