For the first time, I felt that those women really were my family.
Meanwhile, Doña Elena was outside the room demanding to come in and meet “her granddaughter.” Diego went out and said something I never thought I would hear:
—You are not my daughter’s grandmother. Not after what you did.
She screamed, cried, said she had done it all for Valeria. That no bride deserves to have a pregnant woman steal everyone’s attention. That she, as a mother, only wanted to protect the most important day of her daughter’s life.
Then Valeria opened the door.
She had her veil in her hand and eyes full of rage.
—Don’t you dare use me as an excuse —she said—. Marisol was there because I asked her to be. The only person who ruined my wedding was you.
Doña Elena fell silent for the first time.
Diego talked about filing a complaint. I was exhausted, with a newborn in my arms and my body still trembling. Part of me wanted justice. Another part, more confused, thought that maybe, because she was family, we should let it go.
But a week later, Doña Elena showed up at our house at one in the morning.
She was banging on the door like a madwoman.
—Open up! I want to see my granddaughter! You can’t take her away from me!
I locked myself in the bedroom with Camila while Diego threatened to call the police. The next day, she sent an extremely long message to the family group chat.
That was when we discovered the real reason.
It wasn’t Valeria. It wasn’t the wedding. It wasn’t the spotlight.
It was something much sicker.
And when Diego read the last paragraph out loud, we all understood that this was only going to get worse…
PART 3
Doña Elena wrote that no one understood her. That she had sacrificed her life raising three children alone. That she had always had to compete against exhaustion, against abandonment, against lack of money.
Up to that point, I almost felt sorry for her.
But then she continued.
She said that when she found out I was pregnant, it bothered her to see Diego so happy. It bothered her that Valeria and Sofía talked about the baby with excitement. It bothered her that in the family chat, people asked about my ultrasounds, my cravings, the name.
“Before, I was the center of my children’s lives,” she wrote. “Now everything is Camila.”
I felt cold.
My mother-in-law had not locked a woman in labor in a bathroom to protect a wedding. She did it because she was jealous of a baby who had not even been born yet.
She also wrote that she hoped Valeria would get angry with me for getting pregnant close to her wedding. That she thought the sisters would be divided, that Diego would have to choose, that everyone would need her again like before.
But the opposite happened: we united.
And she couldn’t stand that.
Diego blocked her number that same morning. Valeria and Sofía did the same after replying with only one thing: “Get help.”
Sofía, who works in Monterrey, traveled to take her to specialists. They found no illness that justified what she had done. Anxiety, yes. Bitterness too. But not madness. Not something that could explain locking a woman in labor in a bathroom and leaving her without a phone.
The harshest diagnosis didn’t come from the psychiatrist. It came from Valeria, sitting in our living room with Camila asleep in her arms.
—My mother is not sick with love. She is sick with control.
Diego requested a restraining order. We also legally documented everything: the messages, the witnesses, the hospital report, the venue staff. We didn’t do it for revenge. We did it because Camila doesn’t deserve to grow up near someone who saw her as a threat before she was even born.
Doña Elena tried to send messages through neighbors, aunts, acquaintances from church. She said I had brainwashed her children. That a daughter-in-law should never separate a mother from her family.
But no one came back.
Not Diego, not Valeria, not Sofía.
The last time I heard about her, she had said that one day Camila would ask about her grandmother and we would all look like villains. Maybe one day my daughter will ask. And when she is old enough, I will tell her the truth without hatred:
That a grandmother does not earn that name through blood, but through love.
That family is not someone who demands forgiveness after causing harm.
That sometimes protecting your daughter means closing a door forever, even if on the other side is someone everyone told you you had to respect.
Camila was born on the day of a wedding, yes.
But she was also born on the day Diego stopped being the obedient son of a cruel woman and became the father my daughter needed.
And if I learned anything from all this, it is that not everyone who cries is sorry.
Some people only cry because they lost control.
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