Part 2: The murmurs stopped.
I took a breath.
“No one is coming inside today, because your whole family deserves to know why you and your mother tried to take this house from me.”
The silence was so sharp I could almost hear the wind moving through the trees beyond the road.
That house was never a “family home,” no matter how many times Ofelia repeated it. It was mine. Half was inherited from my father, and the other half I paid off myself long before I married Sergio. Every tile, every piece of furniture, every improvement—paid for with my own effort.
But Ofelia never accepted that.
From the moment she learned the property was under my name, she began speaking about it as if it belonged to her family.
“My son’s family has rights too,” she would say—to relatives, neighbors, even the workers fixing the fence. “That house belongs to all of us now.”
It wasn’t a one-time comment. It was a pattern. A way of testing how far she could push.
Three months before her sixty-fifth birthday, she announced she would celebrate it there. Not ask—announce.
From outside my house, my mother-in-law shouted, “Why is the gate closed?”… A minute later, my husband called me begging me to open it, and I told him, “Put me on speakerphone,” because his whole family was going to find out the truth.
PART 1
“No one is stepping into my house today… because I already know exactly what you were planning to do to me.”
I said it calmly, without raising my voice, sitting in front of a cup of coffee at a small restaurant in the plaza, while on my phone screen I watched my furious mother-in-law standing outside my gate.
Just a minute earlier, Ofelia had been shouting from outside my country house on the outskirts of Atlixco:
“Why is the gate locked?!”
Then my husband called, irritated—as if the problem were mine.
“Mariana, where are you? We came to celebrate my mom’s birthday and can’t get in. We brought the cake, the food, even my aunts… what’s going on?”
I smiled as I watched the live camera feed. There they were: Ofelia in her wine-colored dress clutching her oversized bag; Sergio, sweating nervously; his aunts whispering; two nieces inflating gold balloons; a cousin holding a speaker like they already owned the place.
“Put me on speaker,” I said. “I want everyone to hear this.”
The murmurs stopped.
I took a breath.
“No one is coming inside today, because your whole family deserves to know why you and your mother tried to take this house from me.”
The silence was so sharp I could almost hear the wind moving through the trees beyond the road.
That house was never a “family home,” no matter how many times Ofelia repeated it. It was mine. Half was inherited from my father, and the other half I paid off myself long before I married Sergio. Every tile, every piece of furniture, every improvement—paid for with my own effort.
Continued on next page
For complete cooking times, go to the next page or click the Open button (>), and don't forget to SHARE with your Facebook friends.