From the moment I met my mother-in-law, I knew she didn’t like me. It was in her eyes, her cold silence, and the way she compared me to Adam’s ex. When Adam and I eloped quietly, she responded not with anger but with silence.
I hoped her attitude would soften when our son was born. She visited once, smiled briefly, then vanished—no calls, no cards, nothing.
Then came the blow. One evening, Adam told me his parents wanted a DNA test to confirm our son’s paternity. The doubt was unbearable. Reluctantly, we agreed—but only if Adam took one too, to confirm his own father.
At a birthday party, we revealed the results: our son is Adam’s child. But Adam’s father? Not his biological dad.
The room went silent. Denise, his mother, was stunned. Adam confronted her—she had no right to accuse me when her own family secret was exposed.
Denise called, apologized, but we didn’t respond. The deepest hurt was Adam’s hesitation—he hadn’t defended me when it mattered most.
We started therapy. He owned his mistakes and fought to earn my trust again. He stopped defending his mother and showed up for us fully.
We’ve cut ties with Denise, but Adam’s father came back, changed and trying to be there for his grandson.
Our son grows up loved. The DNA tests lie forgotten, because we don’t need proof of who we are—or who belongs in our family.