My husband secretly married his mistress. I secretly sold the €12 million house and he screamed…

As the Madrid sky burned orange at dusk, Sofía García finally hit Send on the last email of the year’s biggest client project.

The final design was delivered. The stress that had been sitting between her shoulder blades all day loosened—just slightly.

It was 8 p.m.
She’d been at her desk since 8 a.m., surviving on a short office nap and a rushed bite of food. The once-crowded floor was emptying fast; only a few coworkers remained, hunched over their screens, chasing their own deadlines.

She leaned back in her chair and let the hum of the office settle around her. The lights above buzzed softly, too bright for this hour, washing the room in a tired white glow. Outside the windows, Madrid was already shifting into night—streetlamps flickering on, traffic thinning, the city exhaling.

Sofía rolled her shoulders, feeling the familiar ache protest and then subside. Her inbox was quiet now. No new pings. No last-minute “one more tiny change” emails. Just silence. Real silence.

She shut her laptop.

The click sounded louder than it should have.

Standing, she slipped on her coat and scarf, movements slow, deliberate, as if she were afraid that rushing might somehow summon the stress back. Her phone vibrated in her pocket—a message from her mother asking if she was still alive, followed by a laughing emoji. Sofía smiled despite herself and typed back a quick Made it. Heading home.

The elevator ride down was mercifully empty. As it descended, she caught her reflection in the mirrored wall: hair pulled into a messy knot, dark circles under her eyes, but also something else—relief, faint but undeniable.

When the doors opened, cool evening air rushed in to meet her. Madrid at night felt different, softer. The heat of the day lingered in the pavement, and the sky, still faintly orange at the edges, faded into deep blue. A bar on the corner spilled laughter onto the sidewalk. Somewhere nearby, a guitarist was playing, the notes drifting lazily through the street.

Sofía paused for a moment before walking on.

Tomorrow could wait. The next project could wait. Tonight, she let herself simply be another person heading home, tired but done, carried forward by the quiet satisfaction of having finished something that mattered.

Related Posts

20 Minutes ago, Kristi Noem was confirmed as…See more

The shock was instant. One confirmed move, and suddenly Kristi Noem is at the center of a storm no one was ready to control. Allies are whispering,…

Beloved CBS meteorologist killed in plane crash after aircraft plunged into icy river

A small plane vanished from radar just twelve minutes after lifting into the winter sky, sending shockwaves through Idaho. Moments later, witnesses reported wreckage scattered across ice…

After 36 Years of Marriage, I Learned the Truth About My Husband in the Most Unexpected Way

I ended a marriage that had lasted more than three decades after I found unexplained hotel stays and large amounts of money missing from our shared account….

When My Neighbor Disrespected My Garden, I Taught Her a Quiet Lesson

I’m seventy-three, retired, and I use a wheelchair—but my world hasn’t gotten smaller. It’s simply concentrated. My tiny yard is my peace, my proof that I’m still…

I had a feeling my husband was slipping sleeping pills into my tea. That night,

Underneath the cover of our seemingly perfect life, Derrick had been conducting a terrifying operation. I felt my heart sink as I scrolled through the photos on…

I got pregnant when I was in Grade 10. My parents looked at me coldly and said, “You brought shame to this family. From now on, we are no longer our children.”

I became pregnant when I was in tenth grade, fifteen years old, and absolutely terrified. The moment I saw those two pink lines on the pregnancy test…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *