Part 2
By the time your phone started vibrating in the back of the taxi, you were already halfway across Guadalajara, still in your wedding makeup, still in your ivory dress, still smelling like roses and hairspray and humiliation. The city lights smeared against the windows in long ribbons, and your reflection looked like someone else entirely. Not a bride. Not a fool. Not even a victim. You looked like a woman who had just stepped off the wrong stage and realized the real performance had been happening behind the curtain all along.
The first call was from Diego.
You watched his name flash on the screen and let it ring out. Then it came again. Then again. After the fourth attempt, the messages began.
Where are you?
Stop acting crazy.
My mother is furious.
Come back now before you make this worse.
You laughed once, softly, because men like Diego always believed the damage started the moment you resisted it. Never when they caused it. Never when they tested the edge of your dignity like boys poking a trapped animal with a stick. In his mind, the insult had been normal. Your departure was the scandal.
By the time you reached the boutique hotel downtown where your cousin Elena worked nights at the front desk, your hands had finally stopped shaking. Elena took one look at your face, your dress, your suitcase, and the way you were holding yourself together by threads and instinct, and she did not ask for details. She got you a key, hugged you hard in the back hallway near the vending machine, and said only, “Whatever happened, you do not go back there tonight.”
So you didn’t.
Inside the room, you peeled off the wedding dress slowly, not dramatically, not with tears or trembling fingers, but with the methodical calm of someone removing a costume after discovering the play was written to disgrace her. You hung it over the shower rod, scrubbed your face clean, put on jeans and a black sweater from your suitcase, and sat on the edge of the bed with your phone in your hand while messages stacked like threats at your door.
Diego called sixteen times.
His mother, Carmen, called seven.
Then a number you did not know called twice, and something cold slipped down your spine.
At 1:14 a.m., Diego sent a voice message.
You played it once and only once. His voice was lower than usual, stripped of charm, drunk on anger and entitlement. “You need to stop this nonsense, Clara. You embarrassed my mother in her own house. You think you can walk out and make us look stupid? Come back now, and maybe I’ll forget this little tantrum. Keep pushing me, and you’ll regret it.”
Maybe I’ll forget this little tantrum.
That was when the last soft illusion finally died.
Before the wedding, there had been moments you tried to explain away. The time he corrected your order for you at a restaurant because he said you were “too indecisive.” The afternoon he laughed when you said you wanted to keep working after marriage and told his friends, “She’s adorable when she talks like a CEO.” The way Carmen used to say things like, “A smart wife learns that peace matters more than pride,” while smiling directly at you as if offering wisdom instead of rehearsal notes.
You had mistaken those moments for ego.
They were auditions.
And on your wedding night, they had finally shown you the role they expected you to play.
At eight the next morning, you called your aunt Sofia.
If Elena was the cousin who brought clean towels and quick rescue, Aunt Sofia was the woman people called when they needed strategy. She was your mother’s older sister, divorced twice, sharper than most attorneys you’d met, and blessed with the kind of memory that could store every insult anyone had ever delivered within a fifty-mile radius. She lived in San Antonio now, where she owned a small import company and wore silk blouses like armor.
When she heard your voice, she didn’t say hello. She said, “Tell me everything, and do not protect him to protect your own embarrassment.”
So you told her.
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