“Because his lawyer realized Dario just signed his own legal collapse,” Lucía replied. “He doesn’t just lose the house. He loses the right to claim anything. And if he tries to challenge it, we have the messages, the audio recordings, and your testimony from last night. There’s also one more detail: the private elevator and the homeowners’ association.”
Lucía opened another folder: receipts, deeds, invoices.
“Everything is in your name. Even the maintenance contract. Dario can’t even legally request a duplicate set of keys without your authorization.”
My mind flashed back to the moment I placed the keys on the counter. It hadn’t been surrender. It had been theater.
“What is he going to do?” I asked.
Lucía shrugged.
“What narcissists do when they lose: shout, threaten, invent stories. But today we’ll request protective measures so he can’t harass you. And we’ll notify the homeowners’ association that you are the sole owner with access rights.”
As if the universe wanted to confirm it, my phone buzzed again—another unknown number. I opened it only because Lucía was beside me.
“I’m Dario’s lawyer. We need to speak urgently. There’s been a ‘misunderstanding.’”
Lucía let out a dry laugh.