My ex-husband sent me an invitation to his son’s first birthday with his lover to humiliate me as “sterile” — but when I showed up, I held hands with the person he thought was dead and whom he had long since buried in oblivion.

Có thể là hình ảnh về chân nến và văn bản

One quiet afternoon, a golden invitation arrived at my door. It wasn’t raining, there was no wind, but as soon as I saw the thick envelope with the surname Montemayor embossed on it, I felt a sharp blow to my chest.

I opened it carefully. It was an invitation to the first birthday party of Franco Montemayor and Jessica Reyes’ son. I smiled, not out of happiness, but because fate knew how to be cruel when it wanted to be.

 

On the back of the card was a handwritten message. I recognized the handwriting immediately. Every curve, every stroke, was familiar. And every word was like acid dripping onto a wound that never fully healed.

 

She said she wanted to see me there. That she wanted me to admire how beautiful her son was. That, if I hadn’t been barren, I would have been the mother of her heir.

She added that I shouldn’t worry, that I could be the godmother. That I should go and see how a real family is built.

My hands trembled. Five years of marriage. Five years carrying the guilt of not being able to have children. Five years believing that I was the one who failed.

Doctor after doctor. Tests, injections, treatments. Always me. He, according to everyone, was perfectly fine.

Until one day he came home with a cold stare and a swift decision. He didn’t want to go on anymore. He needed a woman who could give him a child.

Shortly after, Jessica appeared. His secretary. Always smiling, always understanding.

He fired me. He took away my dignity. He erased me.

In the eyes of the world, I was the barren wife who had been abandoned. And Franco, the successful CEO who had suffered in silence.

I looked at myself in the mirror. My face was calm, but my eyes were burning.

“Do you want me to see a real family, Franco? I’ll show you one.”

The day of the party arrived in the Main Ballroom of the Presidente InterContinental Hotel in Mexico City. The lamps sparkled, the champagne flowed freely, and the elite were in attendance.

Businessmen, politicians, media outlets, and family members who used to greet me with respect now just murmur.

Franco stood center stage. Impeccable suit, confident posture, microphone in hand, like a king before his kingdom.

Beside her was Jessica, holding the baby, smiling as if she owned the world.

Franco thanked everyone for attending and announced that this was the happiest day of his life.

Finally, he said, the Montemayor family had an heir. The son they had prayed for for years.

Then he added, with a venomous smile, that he was the son his first wife could never give him.

Some laughed. Others looked toward the entrance.

“Speaking of which, hasn’t it arrived yet? What a shame.”

At that moment, the large doors opened.

The music stopped. The air grew heavy.

All eyes turned towards me.

I walked in slowly. I was wearing a simple yet elegant black velvet dress.

My face was serene. My eyes, burning.

She was not alone.

Beside me walked an elderly woman, leaning on a golden cane. Her steps were slow, but her presence commanded respect.

She wore a white suit adorned with diamonds.

When Franco saw her, the microphone fell from his hand.

He paled.

“Mother?”

Jessica stepped back, almost dropping the child.

The woman walking with me was Doña Soledad Montemayor, the true owner of the Montemayor empire and mother of Franco.

Two years earlier, Franco had stated that his mother suffered from Alzheimer’s and severe dementia.

He sent her to a private clinic abroad and forbade any visits.

She said she was no longer in her right mind and that she was dangerous.

Thanks to that, he obtained legal power and total control of the company.

But I knew the truth.

Doña Soledad was not crazy.

Franco had drugged her little by little to make her appear disoriented.

When she kicked me out of her life, I had nothing left to lose. I found the clinic. I used my last savings. I got her out of there.

I took her to real doctors.

And little by little, his mind returned.

Now we were in the middle of the room.

Franco shouted, calling for the guards. He said his mother was ill and could harm the baby.

The guards approached, but Doña Soledad raised her cane.

“Take one more step and you’re fired.”

The guards stopped. They knew who was really in charge.

I helped her get on stage.

Doña Soledad looked at her son.

He congratulated the boy on his birthday.

Then he asked why Franco seemed to have seen a dead man.

Wasn’t he glad to see the mother he had already buried before the world?

Franco tried to justify himself, saying that it had all been for his protection.

Doña Soledad let out a cold laugh.

Protection or greed?

He took the microphone and spoke to everyone.

He revealed that Franco faked his illness to steal from the company.

And that thanks to me, the daughter-in-law he called useless had returned.

Then he looked at Jessica and the child.

He mentioned the alleged heir.

I handed him a brown envelope.

Doña Soledad opened it.

He explained that he had ordered a DNA test with the help of a private investigator.

He looked at Franco with pity and contempt.

“Franco, you are sterile. Not her.”

Therefore, the child could not be his.

Her real father was her driver, with whom Jessica had a relationship before becoming close to him.

The room erupted in murmurs.

Jessica cried and confessed that she was afraid. Franco wanted a son to secure the entire inheritance.

Franco fell to his knees.

His pride, his company, and his lie all crumbled.

I approached him.

I reminded him that he was the one who invited me to see a real family.

I took Doña Soledad’s hand.

That was real family. The ones who don’t abandon you.

We left while Franco was shouting with rage.

The police, called by Doña Soledad’s lawyer, took him away on charges of fraud and unlawful deprivation of liberty.

In the end, I didn’t give him the son he so desperately wanted.

But I told him the truth.

And in return, I found a mother who truly loved me.