On my daughter’s first birthday, my mother-in-law lifted her glass in front of the whole family and asked who the real father was because the baby had blue eyes. Everyone expected me to cry.Instead, I reached into my bag and took out two envelopes.My daughter, Lucía, had just learned to clap. She sat on my hip in a white ruffled dress, her tiny hands patting my blouse while her blue eyes stared at the lights like they were stars. Her mouth was full of cookie crumbs, because she had already learned that parties made adults careless and babies opportunistic.The room was filled with white roses, ivory tablecloths, gold-rimmed glasses, and relatives who spoke softly, as if even their voices had to sound expensive.It was a beautiful party.Too beautiful.My mother-in-law, Teresa Aranda, had insisted on hosting it at a private club in San Ángel. I wanted a simple lunch at my parents’ house, with vanilla cake, balloons, and Lucía covered in frosting. But my husband Rodrigo said,
“My mom is excited. Let her do it. It’s her first granddaughter.”Her first granddaughter.As if Lucía belonged to her too.At 7:40, Teresa tapped her glass.The room went silent.She stood in an emerald dress with pearls at her throat, smiling like a woman who had spent her life being obeyed.“I want to make a toast to Lucía,” she said. “This precious little girl turning one today.”Lucía clapped again, happy with the attention.Thn Teresa looked at her.Not like a grandmother.Like a judge.“Although I must say something,” she continued sweetly. “In the Aranda family, we have had five generations of brown eyes. My husband, my sons, my parents, my grandparents… everyone. And then this child appears with such striking blue eyes.”The room shifted.Lucía stopped clapping and buried her face in my neck. Babies may not understand words like betrayal or inheritance, but they understand when a room stops feeling safe.Rodrigo stood near his mother, one hand resting on the back of Paulina Mier’s chair.aulina.The woman Teresa had always wanted for him.Teresa looked at me with fake concern.“Daniela, no one is angry. We’re family. We simply think it would be better to know who Lucía’s real father is.”Someone laughed nervously.My daughter began to cry.Teresa expected me to tremble. She expected me to beg Rodrigo to defend me. She expected a scene she could later call proof that I was unstable.