“I want you to stop being anyone’s joke. And I’m willing to help you change the script.”

I looked at him for a long moment. Then I rested my elbows on the table.

“Then let’s start from the beginning,” I whispered. “Tell me everything.”

In the weeks that followed, my life split into two layers. In one—the visible one—I was the wife who had left the marital home; I attended meetings with a lawyer in Chamberí, gathered pay stubs, bank statements, messages. In the other—the invisible one—I listened as Diego, night after night, unraveled Javier’s small empire of lies.

We met in discreet places: a café near Retiro in the late afternoon, a tavern in Lavapiés always full of tourists, a bench in Parque del Oeste. He brought a USB drive, notes in a notebook, and his memory. I brought questions.

“Here’s the contract with the Barcelona studio,” he explained one day, pointing at my laptop screen. “The bonus clause. If his reputation is compromised, they can terminate it without paying him a cent.”

Another afternoon he showed me emails in which Javier mocked me with his colleagues:

“The poor thing, Lucía, still teaching at that high school in Vallecas. As if I couldn’t support her on my own.”