I inherited $35 million. But before I could tell my husband, the notary left me speechless: “Ma’am, according to the system, you’ve been divorced for two months…”

PART 1
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—Mrs. Valeria… the system says you have been divorced for 2 months.
Valeria Mendoza didn’t blink.
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The rain pounded against the windows of the notary’s office in Polanco, and outside, cars crawled along Presidente Masaryk. She wore a simple black dress, carried dark glasses in her hand, and her heart was still broken by the death of her father, Don Ernesto Mendoza, a logistics entrepreneur who had built his fortune from scratch in Querétaro.
That morning, Valeria had gone to hear the reading of the will. She thought she would only sign sad papers, receive formal hugs, and return to the office of NexaData, the technology company she had founded with her husband, Mauricio Salgado.
But the notary had just said an impossible sentence.
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“Divorced?” she asked, her voice dry. “I live with my husband.”
Adriana Luján, his father’s trusted lawyer, immediately looked up. The notary turned the screen.
—Here appears a divorce by mutual consent. Agreement signed. Final judgment. 2 months ago.
Valeria felt like the air was freezing in her lungs.
That same morning Mauricio had written to her:
“Don’t forget your sweater, it’s going to rain hard. I love you.”
A man capable of worrying about the rain… even though he had legally erased it from his life.
The notary printed the file. Everything was there: divorce petition, waiver of certain rights, property agreement, and notification address sent to NexaData’s corporate office in Santa Fe.
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And finally, his signature.
It wasn’t a fake. It was his real signature.
Valeria then remembered that afternoon at the hospital, when her father was in intensive care. Mauricio came in carrying a huge folder.
“These are urgent documents for the investment round,” he told her. “Sign here, love. If we don’t deliver these today, the whole thing falls apart.”
She had asked:
—Do I have to read it all?
Mauricio kissed her forehead.
—Do you really think I would hurt you?
And she signed.
She signed, exhausted. She signed, trusting. She signed while her father was dying.
Adriana, the lawyer, carefully closed the folder.
—Valeria, listen carefully. Your father left $35 million in assets, stocks, and properties. But he left a clause: everything is exclusively yours, separate from any marital property. And since you’re legally divorced, Mauricio can’t touch a single penny.
Valeria lowered her gaze. Even in death, her father continued to protect her.
She didn’t cry. She didn’t scream. She put the papers in her bag and left the notary’s office in the rain.
In the parking lot he called Hugo Carranza, an old friend who investigated corporate fraud.
“I need you to follow my husband,” she said.
Continued on the next page

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