06/02/2026
My mother tried to take the $60,000 I had saved for years at my engagement party… and when I refused, she slapped me in front of everyone.
The night of my engagement party smelled of fresh roses, vanilla, and white wine.
Everything sparkled.
The lights hanging over the terrace.
The perfectly aligned glasses.
The smiles of our friends.
Miguel's warm hand on my back.
I should remember that night as one of the happiest of my life.
And yet, when I close my eyes, the first thing that comes back isn't the music or the ivory dress I put on with hands trembling with emotion.
The first thing that comes back is the slap.
My name is Emilia Ortega. I was thirty years old, living in Guadalajara, and for most of my life I was the daughter who believed that her parents' love was earned through hard work. I was the one who did what was expected. The one who saved. The one who didn't make a scene. The one who studied, worked, planned, and swallowed her disappointments so as not to upset anyone. My younger sister, Camila, on the other hand, was always different. Impulsive. Capricious. Charming when she wanted to be. A disaster most of the time. But untouchable.
When I was seventeen, my parents gave each of us a fund of sixty thousand dollars.
They didn't say it was only for college.
They didn't say there were any rules.
They said it was to help us get started in life.
I got a partial scholarship, studied business administration, worked while I was in college, and saved every penny I could. I guarded that money like something sacred: thinking about my wedding, a house, a peaceful future. Camila, on the other hand, squandered hers on a private university she dropped out of, a boutique that lasted less time than the opening photos, trips, expensive clothes, and a ridiculous red car that seemed designed to flaunt her debts.
But it was never her fault.
Never, according to my parents.
To them, Camila was “free,” “brave,” “different.”
I was “responsible,” yes, but the word was always uttered with a tone that sounded more like reproach than pride.
The engagement party was at a beautiful restaurant in Tlaquepaque, one of those places with bougainvillea on the walls, lit candles, and long tables where happiness, viewed from afar, seems easier to hold onto. Miguel was by my side, calm as always, with that look of his that seemed to tell me without words that with me, I never had to pretend. He made documentaries. He wasn't scandalous. He wasn't boastful. He didn't have dirty money or a flashy last name. He had something better: decency.
Our friends toasted us.
Her family hugged me with genuine tenderness.
My best friend, Sara, couldn't stop smiling as if the wedding had already begun inside her.
And then I looked toward my family's table.
My mother, Teresa, was sitting too upright.
My father, Rogelio, wouldn't meet my gaze.
Camila was checking her phone as if the entire evening were a burden.
I felt it in my body before I understood it:
something was going to go wrong.
My mother stood up, her glass in hand, and gently tapped the glass with a spoon. The restaurant fell silent. For an absurd second, I wanted to believe that maybe she was going to say something nice. Something simple. Something that would heal a little of the years of favoritism and petty humiliations. I thought that perhaps, for once, she was going to choose me unconditionally.
It started well.
She wished us love.
She spoke of Miguel with polished cordiality.
She said she hoped we would form a stable and happy family.
There was applause.
Miguel squeezed my hand under the table.
Then my mother's voice changed.
Not much.
Just enough.
"But we also want to announce something else," she said. "Your father and I have decided that the sixty thousand dollar fund that was set aside for Emilia will go to Camila."
I felt the air leave my lungs.
At first, I thought it was a cruel joke.
I even smiled, purely out of reflex.
No one else smiled.
My mother remained standing, looking at me with icy calm. My father didn't speak. Camila slowly raised her face, with that expression of mock offense she'd used since childhood when she wanted to appear victimized by something she was actually causing herself.
"Mom, that's not funny," I said, feeling my voice crack. That money has been in my account for years. It's meant for my wedding and our house.
She didn't even flinch.
"Your sister needs it more."
Camila stood up so fast she almost knocked over her chair.
"You've always been selfish, Emilia," she spat. "You knew I was struggling and you never offered to help."
I looked her straight in the eye.
"You received the exact same amount as me. The difference is that I planned my life and you squandered yours trying to impress people."
The entire restaurant was silent.
I could feel the secondhand embarrassment of our guests, the bewilderment of Miguel's family, the quiet pain on Sara's face.
My mother stepped forward.
To be continued in C0mments 👇