My husband had been in his coffin only a few hours when my mother-in-law demanded our house keys. “Pack your bags, incubator,” she sneered, tossing a f3ke paternity test onto the coffin. “My son’s millions belong to his real family.” My husband’s lawyer entered with a projector. Then my husband’s face appeared on screen, and his first sentence made my mother-in-law collapse.

Chapter 1: The Funeral That Turned Against Me

The church of San Agustín in Polanco fell silent the moment Doña Teresa’s voice sliced through the funeral prayers.

“Pack your things, incubator… this house was never yours.”

I stood beside my husband Julián’s coffin, one hand pressed to my eight-month pregnant belly, the other clutching the rosary he had given me on our wedding day.

Only four days had passed since the accident near Valle de Bravo. Four days since police officers came to our home in Las Lomas and told me his car had gone off a cliff.

Julián Mendoza had been one of Mexico’s most powerful businessmen. His technology company handled contracts worth millions. Politicians smiled beside him. Magazines praised him.

But to me, he was the man who wandered barefoot into the kitchen at two in the morning, searching for sweet bread while talking to our unborn son as if the baby could already answer.

Now he lay beneath white lilies while his mother looked almost relieved.

Doña Teresa stepped forward with a yellow envelope in her hand.

“Here is the truth,” she announced. “A DNA test. That child is not my son’s.”

Whispers erupted through the church.

Businessmen. Politicians. Family friends. Employees.

Everyone turned to stare at me as if grief had suddenly become guilt.

“That’s a lie,” I whispered.

Doña Teresa smiled.

“My son may be dead, but he was not stupid. We always knew what you were.”

Then Fernanda, Julián’s sister, grabbed my left hand and ripped off my wedding ring so violently it scraped my skin.

“And this doesn’t belong to you either.”

The ring dropped into her palm like a trophy.

My legs trembled.

My baby kicked hard.

And then Doña Teresa delivered the final blow.

“You are leaving the house today. The accounts are frozen. The cars, the properties, the company — all of it returns to the real family.”

I looked at Julián’s coffin, desperate for him to rise, desperate for the nightmare to break.

Then I remembered his final strange words from the morning before he died.

“Whatever happens, trust Arturo. I already handled everything.”

But Arturo was nowhere in sight.

Doña Teresa lifted her hand toward two security guards.

“Remove her before she embarrasses herself further.”

At that exact moment, the massive church doors burst open.

Every head turned.

And Arturo Salcedo walked down the aisle carrying my husband’s final secret… Continue Reading ⬇️

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