Maria and Adrian had been deeply in love for two years before they married.
Back then, Adrian was gentle, attentive, and sincere. I truly believed I was the luckiest woman alive. Our wedding was celebrated with the full approval and blessings of both families.
As a wedding gift, my mother gave us a three-storey house. It was registered entirely under my name and built from her lifetime of hard work and savings. It wasn’t just a house—it was her sacrifice, her love, her legacy.
After becoming a wife and a daughter-in-law, I did everything I could to protect our small family. I worked at a bank, often leaving before sunrise and returning home late. Because of my schedule, I couldn’t always cook or manage the household the way my mother-in-law expected.
My mother-in-law, Lilibeth, was never satisfied with me. She believed a proper wife should stay home, cook every meal, and center her life around her husband. Still, I never argued. I adjusted quietly, hoping patience would earn her acceptance.
Then one evening, my life collapsed without warning.
Adrian came home looking distant and tense. He sat down and said we needed to “have a serious talk.” My chest tightened before he even opened his mouth.
“I’m sorry,” he said flatly. “There’s someone else. She’s pregnant.”
For a moment, I thought I’d misunderstood. The words didn’t make sense. My heart felt like it was being crushed in someone’s fist. What hurt most wasn’t just the betrayal—it was how calm he sounded, as though he were negotiating a contract instead of destroying our marriage.
A week later, his entire family arrived at my house.
Six people sat in the living room: Adrian, his parents, his sister and brother-in-law—and the other woman. The pregnant mistress. They sat comfortably in the house my mother had given me, staring at me without shame.
Lilibeth spoke first.
“Maria, what’s done is done. You should accept reality. Women shouldn’t fight each other. She’s carrying our grandchild. She has rights. You need to step aside so everyone can stay at peace.”
Not once did she ask how I felt. My pain meant nothing to her. All she saw was a child she believed would carry the family name.
Then my sister-in-law added, “You don’t even have children yet. She does. Don’t force things. Agree to a peaceful divorce so everyone can move on without resentment.”
I said nothing. My eyes drifted to the young woman. She was well dressed, one hand resting protectively on her stomach. There was no guilt in her expression.
She lowered her gaze slightly and said, “I don’t want to hurt anyone. But Adrian and I truly love each other. I just want the chance to be his legal wife… and the child’s mother.”
That was when I smiled—not in sadness, but with calm clarity.
I stood, poured myself a glass of water, placed it gently on the table, and said evenly, “If you’re finished speaking… then it’s my turn.”
The room went silent.
Six pairs of eyes turned toward me. I could hear my heartbeat, but my voice didn’t shake.
“Since you all came here to decide my life for me,” I said softly, “it’s only fair that I clarify a few facts.”
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