At 8:45 a.m., Alejandro arrived at the office like any other day. His access card didn’t work. His computer was locked. His company email had been deactivated.

By 9:30, the Head of HR personally delivered the termination letter. Effective immediately. Reason: gross misconduct and breach of trust.

At 10:15, the company driver politely asked for the keys to the black SUV — the one registered under the company name.

At 11:00, Alejandro called me in panic. “Mariana, what the hell is going on?!”

I answered calmly, “You should ask your mother.”

At exactly 12:00 noon, the locksmith finished changing every lock on the house.

When Doña Teresa arrived with her shopping bags and tried her key, the door wouldn’t open. She stood outside banging on it like a madwoman.

Alejandro arrived minutes later, pale and sweating.

“What is this?!” he shouted through the gate.

I stepped onto the balcony, looking down at both of them.

“This house was never yours, Alejandro. Neither was the car. Neither was the position. I gave you everything — and you let your mother humiliate me in my own kitchen.”

Doña Teresa screamed, “You ungrateful bitch! This is my son’s house!”

I smiled coldly. “No, Teresa. This is my house. Bought with my money. Just like everything else you’ve been enjoying for the last four years.”

I held up my phone and played the video I had recorded the night before — loud enough for the neighbors to hear.

The part where she tore my dress. The part where she called me nobody. The part where Alejandro said nothing.

By evening, the video had been sent to the entire family group chat.

Alejandro lost everything in less than 24 hours: job, car, house keys, and respect. His mother’s pride shattered along with it.

Three months later, I finalized the divorce. Alejandro and Doña Teresa now live in a small rented apartment in a modest neighborhood. She no longer wears designer clothes. He now works as a regular employee in a logistics company — ironically, one of our competitors.

Sometimes I see them when I drive past.

Doña Teresa never looks me in the eye anymore.

And Alejandro?

He finally learned the hardest lesson of his life:

Never let your mother destroy the woman who actually holds the power.

Karma doesn’t always come with noise. Sometimes it comes quietly — the very next day — when the locks change and the keys no longer fit.