“They created a network of shell companies,” he said. “They’ve diverted money from the main company to accounts abroad. On paper they’re investments. In reality, it’s embezzlement. They’re looting everything I built in forty years.”

I looked up.

“And the police?”

“Without clear proof, they won’t lift a finger. And Javier has lawyers who know every loophole in the law. If I accuse him outright, he’ll drag me down with him. They’ll say I signed everything. That I authorized it.”

My stomach tightened.

“What does this have to do with me?” I asked.

Ernesto stared at me.

“To the world, you disappeared after the divorce,” he said. “Javier and Lucía spread the idea that you moved to London, then America… Every time someone asked about you, they changed the story. Eventually people stopped asking. No one knows where you are. No one expects you.”

A sharp pain hit me as I imagined their voices telling those stories about my “new life.”

“I want you to return to their lives,” he said slowly, “but not as María, the ruined ex-wife. I want you to enter their house without them knowing who you are. Work for them. Listen. Watch. Get what I can’t from the outside.”

I let out a disbelieving laugh.