Mother-In-Law Called Her Granddaughters a Betrayal. Then a Son Was Born-olweny - Chainityai

Mother-In-Law Called Her Granddaughters a Betrayal. Then a Son Was Born-olweny

Isabela Cortés was twenty-seven when she married Alejandro Aranda in Querétaro in 2017. She remembered warm lights, white flowers, mariachi music, and the proud smile of his mother, Mercedes, watching from the front row.

That smile seemed loving at first. Mercedes cried through the ceremony and held Isabela’s hands afterward, pressing cold fingers into her palms as if passing down a family command instead of offering a blessing.

“Now it’s your turn, sweetheart… give this family the next Alejandro Aranda IV,” Mercedes whispered. Isabela laughed nervously, because she did not yet understand how seriously the Aranda family treated bloodlines.

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In that family, the story had been repeated for more than a hundred years. Aranda men produced sons. Not just usually. Always. At dinners, Ramón told it like family history, and Mercedes repeated it like scripture.

Alejandro was not cruel then. He was attentive, patient, and gentle with Isabela. He told her he loved that she made his family feel less stiff, less obsessed with appearances, more human.

When Isabela became pregnant during their honeymoon, everyone celebrated. Mercedes arrived with tiny blue blankets and little silver keepsakes engraved before any doctor had confirmed anything. To Mercedes, the child was already a boy.

The ultrasound changed the room. The technician said the baby was a girl, and the silence that followed felt colder than any argument. Alejandro looked stunned, but Isabela told herself shock was not the same as rejection.

When Lucía was born, Alejandro wept harder than Isabela had ever seen him cry. He held the baby against his chest and whispered that he had never known love could feel so immediate.

For a while, Isabela believed that was enough. Alejandro adored Lucía. He called her his princess, his little sky, his tiny piece of happiness. He learned lullabies and carried her through the apartment at midnight.

Mercedes behaved differently when Alejandro was out of the room. She never shouted at first. Her cruelty came quietly, slipped between cups of coffee, folded laundry, and polite visits that left Isabela’s stomach tight.

“Strange… she doesn’t even have the Aranda nose,” Mercedes said once, while looking at Lucía’s sleeping face. Another time, she murmured, “In this family, girls are never born.”

Isabela told herself not to make war over comments. She thought Mercedes was old-fashioned and bitter. She thought ignoring poison would starve it. She thought love inside her marriage would protect her daughters.

Two years later, Isabela became pregnant again. She wanted the second pregnancy to feel peaceful, but the first ultrasound brought back the same pressure in her chest. The technician said the baby appeared to be another girl.

Isabela asked Alejandro not to tell his family yet. She wanted a few weeks without judgment, without Mercedes turning another child into an insult. Alejandro listened, then said his mother still deserved to know.

“She’s still my mother,” he told Isabela. “Besides, she’ll calm down eventually.” It was the kind of sentence that sounded reasonable only because he had not been the one absorbing the damage.

They visited Mercedes’s house one Sunday afternoon. Ramón was there, along with several relatives. Coffee steamed on the table, plates clinked softly, and the polished furniture smelled faintly of lemon oil.

Alejandro announced the news with a careful smile. “We’re having another girl.” A coffee cup slipped from Mercedes’s hand and shattered against the tile before anyone could pretend the moment was ordinary.

“No… no. That’s impossible,” Mercedes said. Her tears arrived quickly, but they were not joyful tears. They looked angry, almost offended, as if Isabela had personally broken a sacred rule.

Isabela felt her hands go cold over her stomach. “What did you just say?” she asked, even though part of her already knew what was coming.

Mercedes pointed directly at her. “My son doesn’t make girls. I ignored the first one, but not two. Those girls are not Arandas. You’re nothing but a cheating liar.”

Alejandro rose so fast his chair scraped back. “Mom, stop it! You’re talking about my wife and my daughters!” Lucía started crying, frightened by the shouting and too young to understand the accusation.

Mercedes screamed that Isabela had polluted the bloodline. She called Lucía an intruder. She called the unborn baby proof of betrayal. The relatives stared, but no one interrupted her.

Alejandro dragged Isabela and Lucía out of the house. In the car, Isabela finally told him about every comment Mercedes had made when he was not around. Each one landed on him like a delayed blow.

He slammed his hands against the steering wheel and cried in frustration. “I’ll never let her near you again,” he said. In that moment, Isabela believed him because she needed to.

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