It echoed through the grand hall of an old palace turned wedding venue near Segovia, silencing all 130 guests in an instant. My mother-in-law, Doña Beatriz de Alencastre, had just struck me—her new daughter-in-law—because, in her words, I had taken “her” chair.It was my wedding day.I had been married to Alejandro Valcárcel for less than two hours.The chair had no sign, no ribbon—nothing to mark it. I had simply sat down for a moment, exhausted from the ceremony, the greetings, and the weight of my dress. I lifted a glass of water, trying to breathe… and then she appeared.At first, she didn’t raise her voice. That would have been beneath her. She leaned close and whispered coldly:“Stand up. That seat is mine.”I thought she was joking. I smiled awkwardly and said I would move right away.
That’s when she hit me.Hard enough to send my earring flying and slam my head back against the chair.Guests stood. My father rushed forward. My mother burst into tears.And Alejandro?He stood there—frozen, pale, silent.As if the real problem wasn’t the slap… but the fact that everyone had witnessed it.She didn’t apologize.Instead, she announced loudly:“A woman without status should learn her place before entering a family like this.”That moment stripped away any illusion.From the beginning, she had looked down on me—mocking my background, correcting my speech, criticizing everything from my job as a physiotherapist to the way I laughed.But that night, there was no mask.Just cruelty.I should have walked away then.I didn’t.Alejandro asked me to stay. He blamed nerves, alcohol, anything but the truth. And I stayed—out of love, pride, or maybe confusion.We finished the wedding with forced smiles and stiff photos.