My mother-in-law tore my dress in my kitchen while screaming, “My son paid for everything,” but the next day she discovered that the house, the car, and her pride had never belonged to her.
“Tear one more thing, Teresa, and tomorrow you won’t even have a key to get into this house.”
The phrase came out of my mouth so calmly that everyone in the kitchen froze, except for my mother-in-law, who was still clutching my white dress in her hands, the one I had just bought for a dinner with business partners in Santa Fe.
Doña Teresa looked at me as if I were an insolent maid.
“Now you’re going to threaten me in my son’s house?” she spat. “You are nobody, Mariana. Everything you have, Alejandro gives you.”
Before I could answer, she pulled the fabric so hard that the dress split in half. The sound pierced my chest. Not because of the money, but because of the humiliation. I had paid for that dress myself, with my salary, from my company, with the account I had had since before I got married.
Alejandro was standing by the refrigerator, his tie loose and his face tired.
“Mom, enough…” he barely said, as if asking her to stop destroying my things were too great a favor.
I looked at him, waiting for something more. A defense. A firm word. A “this is her house too.” But it never came.
Doña Teresa picked up a blue silk blouse.
“Just look at this ridiculous thing. Who do you dress up so much for? To show off my son’s money?”
She tore it in front of me.
Then something inside me went silent.
I didn’t scream. I didn’t cry. I didn’t rush to pull the clothes out of her hands.
I simply took out my phone and started recording.
I recorded her voice. I recorded the dress on the floor. I recorded Alejandro looking away. I recorded my mother-in-law stepping on my clothes as if she wanted to erase my dignity along with them.
“Teresa,” I said, “I paid for those clothes myself.”
She burst out laughing.
“You? Don’t make me laugh. If my son were smart, he would have put everything in his name before you ruined him.”
Everything.
That word landed harder than any insult.
Because Alejandro did not support that house.
He worked for me.
I was the founder and majority shareholder of Ruta Norte Logística, a Mexican transportation and distribution company that I had built over nine years, from a small office in Querétaro to national contracts with supermarket chains and pharmaceutical companies. Alejandro had a position as regional director because I trusted him when no one else would have hired him for that level.
And that house in Lomas de Chapultepec was mine too.
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