Pregnant Bride Trapped For Her Bank Card Turns The Lock Against Them-habe

Valeria Núñez used to believe that exhaustion was proof of progress.

At 19, she stood in furniture warehouses with dust in her hair, measuring sofas for clients who talked down to her because she looked too young to know what mahogany cost.

By 24, she was answering calls at midnight, soothing rich women who changed their minds about curtains after installers were already on ladders.

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By 31, she had a small interior design business in Roma, a leased office with imperfect white walls, and a client list built from referrals instead of favors.

She was not rich.

She was solvent, disciplined, and proud in the quiet way of women who know every peso in their account has passed through their own hands first.

That was one of the first things Bruno said he admired about her.

He used to come by her office with coffee and talk about how beautiful it was that she had built something from nothing.

He told her she was different from the women he had dated before, less spoiled, more grounded, more real.

At the time, she heard romance.

Later, she understood he had been admiring access.

Bruno had charm that worked best in expensive places.

He knew which fork to reach for, which waiter to greet by name, and how to make a rented jacket look like a family inheritance.

For 2 years, he had been “closing a big deal.”

The phrase changed shape depending on who was listening.

With friends, it sounded ambitious.

With Valeria, it sounded temporary.

With his mother, Doña Patricia, it sounded like proof that he was destined for a life someone else should fund until it arrived.

Doña Patricia had welcomed Valeria warmly at first.

She kissed both cheeks, asked about the business, praised her taste, and said she was relieved Bruno had finally chosen a woman who was “useful with practical things.”

Valeria told herself that was just an older woman’s clumsy compliment.

She wanted the family to work.

She wanted Sunday lunches, baby pictures on mantelpieces, shared jokes, and a mother-in-law who would soften once she saw the nursery.

That hope was the first thing they spent.

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