Her Mother-in-Law Wanted a Male Heir. The DNA Test Exposed the Lie-haohao - Chainityai

Her Mother-in-Law Wanted a Male Heir. The DNA Test Exposed the Lie-haohao

ACT 1 — THE FAMILY THAT WORSHIPPED SONS

Isabela Cortés was 27 when she married Alejandro Aranda in 2017, and for a little while, she mistook luxury for safety. Their wedding in San Pedro Garza García looked perfect from the outside.

There were imported white flowers arranged in heavy glass vases, mariachi musicians in polished jackets, and guests who smelled of expensive perfume and old family money. Everyone smiled for photographs. Everyone knew the Aranda name.

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Doña Mercedes, Alejandro’s mother, cried more than anyone. She clung to her son through the ceremony as if marriage were theft, then turned to Isabela with damp eyes and a smile that never reached them.

At the reception, she took Isabela’s hands hard enough for her rings to bite. “Now, sweetheart, make me the next Alejandro Aranda IV,” she whispered, and everyone nearby laughed because they thought she was being charming.

Isabela laughed too. She was new to that world, new to its rules, and too in love to understand that some jokes are not jokes at all. They are contracts spoken softly.

The Arandas believed their history made them untouchable. For more than 100 years, they said, only boys had been born in their line. They repeated it at Sunday cookouts like a family miracle.

The men laughed over grilled meat. The women nodded as if the story were sacred. Isabela heard it so often that she began to understand daughters were not merely unexpected there. They were considered a defect.

Alejandro was different, or so she believed. He was proud and stubborn, yes, but he could be gentle when no one was watching. He told Isabela he wanted a house full of children.

He did not say sons only. That omission became one of the reasons she trusted him. She thought love would be stronger than a surname. She thought marriage meant he would stand beside her.

ACT 2 — WHEN THE FIRST GIRL ARRIVED

When Isabela returned from the honeymoon pregnant, the Aranda family celebrated before they knew anything. Doña Mercedes bought tiny blue blankets and placed them in a nursery closet as if faith could choose biology.

At the ultrasound appointment, the room smelled faintly of disinfectant and warm printer paper. The technician smiled gently and said the baby was a girl. Isabela felt happiness rise first, pure and bright.

Then she saw Alejandro’s face. It did not fall in disgust, but it tightened. He needed days to process what his family had treated as impossible. Those days hurt more than Isabela admitted.

When Lucía was born, everything changed for him. The moment the nurse placed that tiny baby in his arms, Alejandro broke open. He cried so hard Isabela cried with him.

He called Lucía his princess. He kissed the wrinkled little hand that grabbed his finger. He promised his daughter the world, and for a while, Isabela believed the Aranda curse had been broken by love.

Doña Mercedes did not accept it. She visited often when Alejandro was at work, bringing gifts no one needed and comments that poisoned the air slowly. She never shouted at first.

“How strange she didn’t get the family nose, right?” she would say, sipping coffee. “Girls don’t come out in this house. God knows why He sends such strange signs.”

Isabela answered with silence. She told herself older women said cruel things because they had been taught cruelty. She told herself peace was better than confrontation while Lucía slept nearby.

The silence did not protect her. It taught Mercedes that there would be no consequence. It also taught the rest of the family that Isabela could be blamed in small doses without anyone objecting.

Two years later, Isabela became pregnant again. This time, she did not tell the Arandas immediately. She wanted a few weeks of joy before the family turned her body into a courtroom.

When the doctors confirmed another girl, Isabela cried in the car. Not because she was disappointed in her baby, but because she already knew what that baby would be accused of.

She begged Alejandro to keep the news private. He promised at first, then convinced himself his mother only needed time. At Sunday lunch, surrounded by tíos, cousins, and polished silverware, he announced it.

ACT 3 — THE DINNER THAT TURNED VIOLENT

Doña Mercedes dropped her crystal glass. The crack against the table silenced the room before the red wine even spread. Forks stopped halfway up. Someone’s chair scraped, then stopped too.

The smell of roasted meat, smoke, and lemon cleaner suddenly felt suffocating. Isabela sat with one hand on her belly, feeling her baby move while every face around the table looked anywhere but at her.

“No,” Mercedes said, and the word came out like a verdict. “My son does not make girls. I let the first one pass, but 2? Not a chance.”

The room did not defend Isabela. One cousin stared at his plate. An aunt pressed her napkin to her lips and pretended shock had stolen her voice. Alejandro was the only one who stood.

“You don’t talk to my wife like that,” he shouted, but his voice was swallowed by Mercedes’s fury. She pointed at Isabela as if the pregnant woman were something dirty left on the floor.

“You are some nobody,” Mercedes screamed. “You went with another man. You are trying to bring bastards into this family and put the Aranda name on them.”

Isabela’s rage went cold. She imagined lifting the serving dish and throwing it against the wall. She imagined making all those polished relatives flinch the way she had been forced to flinch.

Instead, she stayed seated. She covered her belly with both hands. She chose her baby over the satisfaction of breaking something, and that restraint cost her pride she never got back.

Alejandro dragged his mother from the dining room that day, but he did not cut her off. That was the first crack in Isabela’s trust. He still believed the family could be repaired.

Weeks later, he arranged what he called a peaceful dinner. He said Mercedes would apologize. He said his mother had gone too far and finally understood. Isabela wanted to believe him because believing was easier.

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