She walked away with ₱10,000… he lost everything before dessert was served.

PART 1

Mateo slid the legal document across the pristine mahogany table with a look of absolute contempt, his Rolex clinking arrogantly against the polished wood. The sound echoed through the freezing boardroom on the 40th floor of one of the most exclusive buildings in Santa Fe, Mexico City. The air conditioning was so strong it felt like punishment, a sterile atmosphere that smelled of old money and expensive cologne.

Across from him, Jimena sat with her hands folded in her lap. She wore a beige knit sweater that had seen better days, with small pills on the elbows, and her hair tied in a simple bun. She looked insignificant, swallowed by the large black leather chair. For three long years, Mateo had made her believe she was nothing. To him, Jimena was still the same broke girl he had “rescued” when she worked serving tables in a small diner in Coyoacán.

Mateo, on the other hand, looked impeccable. His tailored navy suit from Polanco screamed corporate success. His slicked-back hair gave him a sharp, aggressive appearance. He didn’t even look at her; his eyes were fixed on his latest smartphone, smiling faintly at messages from Valeria, the 22-year-old PR intern waiting to celebrate his freedom with champagne that night.

“Let’s review the terms one last time,” said Attorney Robles, Mateo’s lawyer, her voice sharp enough to cut glass. “Mr. Mateo keeps the Polanco penthouse, the vacation home in Valle de Bravo, the Porsche 911, and the investment portfolio. You, miss,” she paused venomously, “will receive a one-time payment of 10,000 pesos. In exchange, you waive any rights to my client’s future assets. This offer is non-negotiable.”

Jimena didn’t blink. She stared at the watermark on the paper. 10,000 pesos. It was a miserable amount, a cruel insult after years of psychological abuse, of counting every coin, of enduring public humiliation.

“It’s more than enough, Jimena,” Mateo sneered, not lifting his eyes from his phone. “More than you had when I found you serving pozole. Consider it your severance. Sign already—I’ve got a reservation at Pujol at 8, and I hate being late.”

At that moment, there was a slight movement in the darkest corner of the room. Sitting in an armchair, partially hidden behind a decorative plant, was an older man dressed in a charcoal gray suit. He had been there the whole time. Attorney Robles had ignored him, assuming he was just some lost client waiting for a notary, an old man who didn’t matter. He hadn’t said a word, simply flipping through the pages of a financial newspaper.

“Ignore him,” Mateo muttered. “Sign already, Jimena. You know you can’t afford a lawyer. You leave with what you brought: nothing.”

Jimena picked up the heavy pen and, with a slightly trembling hand, signed her name on the dotted line. “Done. I didn’t want your money, Mateo. I loved the man I thought you were,” she whispered, her voice breaking.

“Pathetic,” Mateo spat, snatching the papers with a victorious grin. He stood up, buttoning his jacket, feeling like the king of the world.

Then, the sound of the newspaper snapping shut echoed like a gunshot. The old man stood up. He was tall, imposing, with silver hair and a gaze that promised absolute destruction. He walked deliberately toward the table. Mateo couldn’t believe what was about to happen…


PART 2

“Excuse me,” Mateo barked angrily. “We’re in the middle of a private matter. Sit back down.”

The man didn’t stop. He reached the table, placing his large hands on the wood and leaning forward, towering over Mateo like an approaching storm.

“Who do you think you are?” Mateo demanded, his voice faltering.

The man ignored him completely. He turned to Jimena, and the hardness in his eyes melted instantly into a warm hazel—the exact same color as hers.

“It’s over, daughter. Let’s go,” he said in a deep voice that seemed to shake the room.

Mateo blinked, confused, then burst into sarcastic laughter. “Daughter? That explains it. Like father, like daughter. Teach her some manners, old man. If you worked in my company, I’d fire you on the spot.”

The older man smiled—a predator’s smile.

“If I worked in your company, boy… you clearly don’t understand the geography of this situation.”

He pulled a business card from his jacket and slid it across the table.

Mateo looked down.

His face went pale instantly.

Don Alejandro Garza
CEO & Founder
Grupo Garza

Grupo Garza wasn’t just a company—it was an empire.

Mateo looked at the card, then at the man, then at Jimena.

“You… you’re a Garza,” he stammered.

Jimena stood up slowly. She was no longer small or afraid. She lifted her chin with unshakable dignity.

“You always complained that I never talked about my family,” she said coldly. “You assumed that because I worked in a diner, I was poor. I wanted to know someone loved me for me—not for my father’s billions. Now I have my answer.”

Don Alejandro placed a protective hand on her shoulder.

“You’ve made a catastrophic mistake, Mateo. You celebrated taking 10,000 pesos from my daughter—but by forcing her to sign that document, you just lost access to a 4-billion-peso inheritance.”

He checked his watch.

“Come, Jimena. The driver is waiting. We have a board meeting.”

“Board meeting?” Mateo whispered.

Don Alejandro paused at the door.

“Oh, didn’t you check your email? Jimena isn’t just my daughter. She’s the new majority shareholder of the consortium that completed a hostile takeover of your company this morning.”

The door shut.

Mateo stood frozen, holding a divorce paper that now burned like fire.


(Continuation Summary)

Jimena transforms completely—becoming powerful, elegant, and ruthless. She demotes Mateo to a junior analyst, stripping him of everything. His life collapses: he loses his home, his status, and even Valeria abandons him.

Desperate, Mateo attempts to steal company secrets—but it’s a trap. Jimena catches him in the act with federal agents.

He is arrested, tried, and sentenced to 5 years in prison and forced to repay 40 million pesos.

At the trial, he begs Jimena for help.

She doesn’t even react.

Later, she launches the “Phoenix Initiative”, a 100-million-peso fund to help victims of abuse rebuild their lives.

Years later, Mateo sends her a message from prison:

“I’m sorry. I love you.”

She simply blocks the number.

The man who thought he was king now sleeps in a concrete cell.

And the woman he treated like nothing now rules an empire.