My Sister Took My Fiance, Then I Arrived With Mexico’s Most Feared Man-Ginny

Valeria Salgado received the wedding invitation on a Tuesday, in the exact hour she had finally decided to pack away the dress she never got to wear.

Then the envelope arrived.

It was cream-colored, thick, and edged in gold, the kind of stationery that announced money before a person had to mention it.

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The perfume on it was sweet and heavy.

Camila’s perfume.

Valeria stood in the hallway of her apartment with her keys still in her hand and read the names twice.

Camila Salgado and Mauricio Ledesma.

Her younger sister.

Her ex-fiance.

For a moment, the hallway tilted around her.

She could hear the old applause from the restaurant in Polanco, the night Mauricio had knelt in front of her with a ring glittering under warm chandeliers.

Mauricio had looked up at Valeria then as if she were the only woman in the city.

Four months later, he met her at a cafe in Santa Fe and ended the engagement between two sips of espresso.

He did it with a clean shirt, a shining watch, and no visible grief.

“Valeria, don’t take this the wrong way,” he said, which was how weak men prepared a woman to receive cruelty politely.

She stared at him across the tiny table.

“My career is taking off,” he continued. “I’m entering influential circles now. I need a wife who properly projects my image.”

“Your image?”

He exhaled as if she were making this harder than it needed to be.

“You’ve gained weight. You don’t dress up the way you used to. Camila understands that environment better. She’s just more presentable.”

Presentable.

The word did not break her heart all at once.

Valeria remembered looking down at the ring.

It had seemed suddenly ridiculous on her hand.

The worst part was not even Mauricio leaving.

The worst part was learning that her family had already made room for the betrayal.

That night, she drove to her parents’ house in Del Valle because some childish part of her still believed a mother would know what to do with a daughter’s ruined life.

She found Camila sitting beside Mauricio at the dining table.

Doña Beatriz was pouring coffee.

No one looked shocked.

“Don’t make a drama out of this, my daughter,” Doña Beatriz said.

Valeria turned toward her mother.

“You knew?”

“Camila is young, beautiful, and has opportunities ahead of her,” her mother said, as if beauty were a family business and Valeria had failed to invest. “You have always been the strong one. You can handle this.”

She did not scream.

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