
On Tuesday morning, while I was serving my children breakfast in the kitchen, I looked out the window and saw my sister-in-law Lucía driving off in my car.
My car. A black Volvo XC90, purchased two years earlier with my grandmother’s inheritance, registered under my name, and insured under my name as well. I assumed Javier might have lent it to her for something urgent, so I stayed quiet. But when he walked into the house—calm, holding his coffee, tie slightly crooked—I asked him directly:
Where is my car?
He didn’t even lift his eyes from his phone.
—I gave it to Lucía. She needs it more than you.
For a moment, I thought I had heard him wrong.
—Sorry?
Then he finally looked at me, wearing that same tired half-smile he used whenever he wanted to dismiss me as overreacting.
—Come on, Elena. You’re home all day. What does a housewife need a luxury car for?
He said it quietly, almost mockingly, like he was explaining something obvious to a careless child. Marta, my eldest daughter, slowly set her spoon down in her bowl. Daniel watched me in silence. I felt a sharp impact in my chest—not anger, but clarity.
Lucía had spent years depending on others. First, her rent was covered by her mother. Then Javier helped her open a beauty salon, which shut down in less than a year. After that came credit cards, “temporary” loans, late-night calls. There was always an excuse. And always, behind everything, was my husband fixing her problems with money that wasn’t entirely his.
“Tell her to return the keys,” I said.
Javier let out a sigh.
—Don’t make a scene.
—I’m not making anything. Tell her to bring back my car keys.
“You’re unbelievable,” he snapped, then added, “You don’t even earn a salary, yet you act like you support this household.”
I didn’t respond. I cleared the table, washed Daniel’s face, and braided Marta’s hair for school. I did everything with a calmness that even surprised me. Javier left half an hour later, convinced he had won yet another argument by wearing me down.