High
Apr 30, 2026

What a sh0ck to visit my friend in the hospital. My husband was taking care of her. I withdrew my assets and blocked them…

That morning, Madrid looked grayer than usual—yet my spirits were strangely bright. I’m Sofia, and I was busy smoothing my husband Ricardo’s tie as he stood tall in front of the oversized mirror in our master bedroom. Our luxurious home in La Moraleja had been the quiet witness to five years of what I thought was happiness. Or at least… that’s what I believed until that day.

“Are you sure you don’t want me to pack you something for the drive?” I asked softly, patting his broad chest.

“Valencia is a long way.”
Ricardo smiled—the kind of smile that always dissolved my worries. He pressed a lingering kiss to my forehead.
“No, my love. I’m in a rush. The client in Valencia wants an urgent meeting tonight. This project matters for my portfolio. I want to prove to your father I can succeed without hiding behind your family name.”
I nodded, proud of him. Ricardo was a “hard-working” husband… even though the truth was that the money for his business, the Mitsubishi Montero he drove, and the designer suits he wore had all come from me—dividends from the company I inherited and now ran. But I never rubbed it in. In marriage, what’s mine is his too… right?

“Be careful,” I said. “Message me when you get to the hotel.”
He agreed, grabbed his keys, and left. I watched him disappear through the carved oak door—and felt a faint, uneasy tug in my chest. A warning I brushed aside. Maybe it was just the guilty relief of having the house to myself for a few days.

Later that afternoon, after several meetings at the office, my thoughts drifted to Laura—my best friend since college. She’d texted me the day before, claiming she’d been admitted to a hospital in Segovia with acute typhoid fever. Laura lived alone in that unfamiliar city. I’d always tried to help her. The little house she stayed in was one of my properties, and I’d let her live there rent-free out of compassion.
“Poor Laura,” I murmured. “She must feel so lonely.”
I glanced at the time—two o’clock. My afternoon was suddenly wide open, and an idea hit me: why not visit her? Segovia was only a couple of hours away if traffic behaved. I could surprise her with her favorite cocido and a basket of fresh fruit.

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