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Exactly two days after receiving the divorce papers, I immediately suspended the monthly pension of five hundred thousand pesos that I gave to my former mother-in-law.

Posted on April 28, 2026 By jgjzb No Comments on Exactly two days after receiving the divorce papers, I immediately suspended the monthly pension of five hundred thousand pesos that I gave to my former mother-in-law.

Exactly two days after the divorce papers were finalized, I immediately stopped the ten-million-peso monthly support I had been providing to my former mother-in-law.

The bank card, the passbook, even the PIN—
I had personally handed all of it to her some time ago.

But there wasn’t a single clause in the divorce agreement that required me to continue supporting her. One call to the bank was all it took to end the transfers. Clean. Fast. No complications.

My ex-husband, Mauricio, was far too busy at the time attending to Pamela in a luxury maternity clinic in Mexico City. Because his mistress was pregnant, he followed her everywhere, afraid she might leave him.

Family? His own mother? Responsibility?

Those words had long disappeared from that man’s sense of morality.

That afternoon, my Messenger filled with messages—voice notes one after another, like a storm, each complaint more absurd than the last:

“Rebeca, what’s wrong with you?”
“Where is my mother’s money?”
“Are you really going to let her go hungry?”

I stared at the screen and couldn’t help but laugh.

On the table, the red folder with the divorce papers was answer enough—clearer than any explanation I could give.

Ungrateful?

There was no longer any connection between me and that family.

I swiped away the notifications, didn’t reply, and set my phone aside. My chest felt lighter, filled with a calm I hadn’t experienced in years.

That night, he called.

The phone rang for nearly a minute before I finally answered. It was 10:41 p.m., and his voice was tight with barely controlled anger.

“Have you lost your mind? That support was humanitarian. If you don’t give my mother money, how do you expect her to live?”

My reply was simple:

“Aren’t you supposed to support her?”

A heavy silence followed on the other end.

I knew perfectly well he was standing next to his so-called “great love,” careful not to raise his voice so as not to wake her. I had no interest in playing the martyr anymore, so I ended the call.

The next morning, it wasn’t Mauricio who reacted first.

It was his mother, Doña Socorro.

It was still early when she blocked the entrance to my new apartment in Santa Fe. Her hair was messy, her clothes wrinkled, and the moment she saw me, she dropped to her knees.

“Rebeca, please!”
“Don’t take away the only thing I have left!”
“How am I supposed to live now?”

Neighbors began to gather and whisper:

“Isn’t her son a wealthy businessman?”
“Then why is she still depending on her ex-daughter-in-law?”

Doña Socorro turned pale. Shame showed clearly on her face, but she still clung to my leg, refusing to let go.

I looked down at her calmly.

“You’ve come to the wrong person.”

“I no longer have any relationship with Mauricio. From now on, ask your son—not me.”

She froze for a moment. Panic filled her eyes. But in the next instant, her expression twisted into fury.

“Even if you’re divorced, you still have to take care of me!” she shouted. “Or was all the affection I showed you fake?!”

That was when I finally laughed.

“Affection?”

“You were the one telling everyone I was infertile.”
“You interfered in our marriage and encouraged him to control my money.”
“When he asked me for money, did he ever treat me like family?”

Each word struck her pride like a blow. She trembled with anger, but had no argument left. The murmurs around us grew louder.

At that moment, Mauricio arrived.

Dragging a suitcase in one hand and carrying gifts for his mistress in the other, he froze when he saw what was happening.

“Mom? Rebeca? What’s going on?”

Doña Socorro ran toward him, crying.

“She cut me off! She even sold the house! Where are we going to live now?”

I remained where I stood, arms crossed, watching them calmly.

“I have every right to sell that house.”

“My parents paid for it.”

“And you both forgot something important—you never checked whose name is on the deed.”

Mauricio’s face turned completely pale. Everything fell from his hands. Pamela clung to his arm, looking at me in fear.

I smiled coldly.

“What’s wrong, Mauricio? Did you really think I would support you and your family forever while you cheated on me?”

“Rebeca, you can’t do this!” he shouted, trembling. “That house is ours! Where do you expect my mother to go?”

I stepped closer.

“Your responsibility,” I said, pointing at Pamela, “is the life you chose. If you were bold enough to start another family, then be responsible enough to support it.”

I turned to Doña Socorro.

“You lived like a queen—but forgot that your crown came from the woman you despised.”

Suddenly, she lunged at me, trying to slap me, screaming insults.

But I caught her wrist firmly.

“I’m not infertile,” I said quietly.

“We took tests years ago. The problem was your son. I kept that secret to protect him. I let you humiliate me.”

Then I looked at Pamela.

“So tell me… whose child is that?”

Silence fell.

Mauricio stared at her, fear replacing everything.

“Pamela… what is she talking about?”

She couldn’t answer.

I laughed softly.

“I still have the reports. Should I share them?”

Mauricio collapsed to his knees.

His perfect life—gone in an instant.

I turned to the agent.

“The sale continues. Remove everything that isn’t mine.”

I walked away without looking back.

Three months later, I was in Los Cabos, watching the sunset with a glass of wine. The money I once spent on them now belonged to my own peace, my future, my life.

Mauricio?

Living in a small rented room.

Pamela?

Gone.

The child?

Not his.

Doña Socorro?

Selling snacks outside a school.

No one helping her.

I opened his last message:

“Rebeca… please. At least send 5,000 pesos…”

I smiled.

Delete.

Block.

Because the love I once gave came from my heart—

But the freedom I now have comes from finally choosing myself.

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