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    Home » The millionaire boss went to destroy her employee’s life in his own home… what she discovered inside brought her to her knees.
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    The millionaire boss went to destroy her employee’s life in his own home… what she discovered inside brought her to her knees.

    ElodieBy Elodie30/04/202611 Mins Read
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    PART 1

    From the 42nd floor of her glass tower in Santa Fe, Valeria Garza controlled everything. Known in Mexico City’s business world as “The Iron Lady,” she had built a 500 million peso real estate empire without letting sentimentality interfere with her business dealings.

    For her, employees were mere cogs in the machine. If one failed, it was replaced.

    That Tuesday morning, the faulty cog had a name and surname: Mateo Ruiz.

    Mateo was the lead analyst on a crucial project, but for the past three months he’d been consistently late, missed four important meetings, and today he hadn’t even shown up for the final presentation with the foreign investors.

    Valeria had had to scramble to salvage a $20 million contract. Fury was boiling inside her. Her HR director suggested sending him a termination notice, but Valeria wanted to teach him a lesson.

    She wanted to go herself, demand the project documents, and fire him face-to-face to make it clear that no one was messing with her time.

    He climbed into his armored SUV and ordered his driver to head to the address on the file. The GPS led them far from luxury, through city traffic, into the most impoverished areas of Valle de Chalco.

    The paved streets vanished, giving way to dirt roads, street vendor stalls with colorful tarps, and stray dogs barking as the enormous black vehicle passed. The contrast was grotesque.

    The truck stopped in front of an unpainted cinderblock house with a corrugated metal roof and a rusty metal door. Valeria got out of the vehicle, her designer heels sinking into the dust.

    She slammed her fist on the door, ignoring the curious glances of the neighbors.

    It took them two minutes to open the door. When it creaked, Valeria prepared her most lethal speech. But the words caught in her throat.

    Standing before her was Mateo. He wasn’t wearing his usual worn office suit, but a milk-stained T-shirt.

    He had deep, dark circles under his eyes, like bruises, and was holding a baby in his arm that was crying inconsolably. Hidden behind his right leg, a boy of about four stared at Valeria with terrified eyes.

    “Mrs. Garza?” Mateo stammered, pale as a gh0st.

    “Don’t give me any excuses, Mateo,” Valeria spat, resuming her cold demeanor and deliberately ignoring the children. “You missed the 9 o’clock presentation.

    You’ve jeopardized my company. You’re fired. Give me the ‘Horizon’ project files and get out of my sight.”

    Mateo lowered his head. He didn’t argue. He didn’t plead. He just let out a broken sigh.

    “The files are on the table, ma’am. Please come and get them… I can’t let go of my daughter right now.”

    Valeria frowned, annoyed by the insolence of being invited into that gloomy place. She took a step inside, ready to grab her USB drive and leave for good.

    But as she crossed the threshold and peered into the darkness of the room, Valeria saw something on an old sofa that left her completely paralyzed. Her heart, cold for decades, lurched violently.

    I can’t believe what’s about to happen…

    PART 2

    The interior of the house was tiny and stifling. The only air came from a broken fan that barely turned. In one corner, on a small table covered with a plastic tablecloth, was an altar. A votive candle was lit in front of an image of the Virgin of Guadalupe, and next to it, a photograph of a smiling young woman with a black ribbon in the frame.

    But that wasn’t what stopped Valeria’s breath.

    It was what lay on the worn sofa in the center of the room. A girl of about eight was wrapped in blankets, shivering violently despite the warmth of the room. Her breathing was a sharp, painful hiss. Her lips were purple and her skin was covered in cold sweat.

    Valeria, who had just dismissed that man with clinical cruelty, felt the ground disappear beneath her feet.

    “What… what’s going on here?” he asked, and for the first time in 20 years, his voice trembled.

    Mateo hugged the baby tighter to calm his crying and looked at the ground.

    “My wife passed away six months ago, Mrs. Garza. Stomach cancer. Social Security didn’t give us the appointments in time, and… it all happened very quickly. Since then, it’s just me and the three children. I don’t have any family in the city. I tried not to miss work, I swear. I worked through the night. The report with the complete project and the five-year projections is right there on the table. I finished it at 3:00 a.m.”

    Mateo pointed to an old laptop computer surrounded by empty baby bottles and pharmacy receipts.

    “And the girl?” Valeria asked, instinctively approaching the sofa.

    “It’s Lucía. She has pneumonia. I took her to the public clinic yesterday, but they told me there were no beds or pediatricians on duty. They gave me paracetamol and sent me home. Today she woke up worse. I was about to carry her to the bus stop to try to get to another hospital, but I can’t take all three of them and I have no one to leave them with.”

    Valeria looked at the USB drive on the table. The document that saved her 20 million pesos. Mateo had worked all night watching his daughter struggle to breathe, trying to hold on to a job she had just ruthlessly taken from him.

    A pang of self-loathing pierced Valeria’s chest.

    She approached the girl and touched her forehead. It was burning hot. The alarming heat brought back a buried memory. Suddenly, she was no longer in her expensive designer dress. She was back to being a 10-year-old girl in a poor neighborhood of Monterrey, watching her own mother d1e of fever on a makeshift bed because they couldn’t afford a private doctor. Valeria had sworn that day that she would earn so much money that she would never feel powerless again. She had built walls of cash and arrogance, forgetting where she came from and trampling on those who were exactly where she started.

    “You’re not taking any public transport,” Valeria said, turning sharply. Her voice was no longer that of a corporate boss, but that of a fierce woman ready for anything. “Take the children. Diapers, bottles, whatever you need. Now.”

    “Ma’am?” Mateo looked at her, confused and scared.

    “We’re leaving, Mateo!” she shouted, taking off her silk jacket and using it to wrap little Lucía. “I’ll take her. You bring the other two.”

    In less than five minutes, the imposing armored SUV was speeding along the ring road at 140 kilometers per hour, running red lights, escorted by panic. Valeria ordered the driver to go directly to Hospital Ángeles, one of the most exclusive and expensive private medical centers in the country.

    Upon arriving at the emergency room, medical staff saw the famous businesswoman rush in carrying an unconscious child. They attended to Lucía immediately.

    It was four agonizing hours in the waiting room. Mateo sat rocking the baby, while the four-year-old slept with his head against his leg. Valeria didn’t leave. She canceled three board meetings, turned off her cell phone, and sat in the cold hospital chairs next to her former employee. She ordered food for the children and prepaid a 200,000-peso bill without batting an eye.

    Finally, the doctor came out.

    —They arrived just in time. One more hour and the infection would have caused her lungs to collapse. She’s stable, but she needs to stay in intensive care for at least 5 days.

    Mateo burst into tears, falling to his knees in the middle of the hospital corridor. Valeria, the iron woman, knelt beside him and placed a hand on his shoulder.

    —Your job is safe, Mateo. Your salary will double starting tomorrow. And you never have to worry about medical expenses again.

    For the next five days, Valeria went to the hospital every afternoon. She hired a professional nanny to look after the toddlers while Mateo was with Lucía. One day, while Lucía slept connected to oxygen, Valeria noticed a school notebook on the nightstand. A crayon drawing was sticking out.

    She picked it up carefully. It was a drawing of a gray house with a tin roof, but above it, in a very blue sky, was a woman with angel wings looking down. Below, in shaky handwriting like an 8-year-old girl, it said: “For my mom, so she knows we’re okay even though we’re cold.”

    That night, in her vast, empty penthouse, Valeria cried for the first time in 15 years. She realized that she had built entire cities for rich people, but had let her own humanity rot in the process.

    A month later, Valeria called a shareholders’ meeting for her company. The board of directors, composed of men in suits who only talked about profit margins, was awaiting the financial reports for the new shopping center in Polanco.

    Valeria turned on the screen. There were no floor plans of luxury stores. There were photos of the streets of Valle de Chalco.

    “Gentlemen, I’m going to divert 150 million from our main investment fund,” he announced with a calmness that chilled the room.

    “We’re going to buy four city blocks in Valle de Chalco. We’ll build a subsidized housing complex, a free, top-notch daycare center for factory workers, and, most importantly, a community clinic with 24-hour pediatric care.”

    Chaos erupted immediately. The vice president slammed his fist on the table.

    “Valeria, you’ve gone mad! The shareholders are going to ruin us! That money is for the commercial tower! We build for those who can pay, we don’t do charity.”

    Valeria looked at him with eyes that brooked no argument. She took out a folder and dropped it heavily onto the mahogany table.

    “I’ve run this company and made everyone in this room a multimillionaire over the past 10 years. If anyone here isn’t willing to approve this project today, they can leave their resignation on this table. I’ll personally buy 100 percent of their shares above market value. But the clinic will be built. With you, or without you.”

    The silence was absolute. No one dared to challenge her. They knew Valeria Garza never lost.

    Eight months passed. The landscape in that forgotten area of ​​the State of Mexico began to change. Where there had once been dust and neglect, now white, modern buildings, green spaces, and playgrounds were rising.

    On the day the clinic opened, the street was filled with neighborhood families, mariachi musicians, and children running around. The clinic bore a huge neon sign:

    “Clinic of Hope – Maternity and Childhood.”

    And the adjacent daycare center had a plaque at its entrance:

    “Mateo Ruiz Care Center,” a tribute to the man whose tragedy had given new life to the city’s most powerful businesswoman.

    Mateo was there, wearing a new suit, hugging his children. Valeria cut the ribbon to the applause of the community.

    At that moment, he felt a tug on the sleeve of his white blazer. It was Lucia. The girl was no longer pale or trembling; her cheeks were rosy and she had a bright smile. In her hands she held a piece of paper.

    “It’s for you, Mrs. Valeria,” the girl said shyly.

    Valeria picked up the paper. It was another crayon drawing. This time there was no gray house, no sad sky. There was a large, white building, and five figures holding hands: Mateo, the three children, and a tall woman in a white coat. Above, written in neater handwriting, it read: “Thank you for saving us from the darkness.”

    Valeria Garza hugged the little girl tightly, burying her face in her hair. She looked at the people around her, the children laughing in the new daycare, the mothers lining up at the safe clinic.

    All her life she thought wealth was measured in bank accounts, stocks, and glass skyscrapers. But there, on a street in Valle de Chalco, clutching a little girl she had helped save, she discovered the absolute truth. It wasn’t her who had rescued her employee’s family. That rusty sheet metal door was what had saved her.

    And for the first time in her entire life, Valeria felt truly like a millionaire.

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