My Mother-in-Law Burned My Legs, Then My Husband Defended Her-tete

The first thing I remember is the smell.

Not the pain.

Not the scream.

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The smell came first, thick and sour and hot, boiled tomatillo and fried tortilla rising with a sharp edge of oil that made the little kitchen feel smaller than it was.

Steam climbed toward my face, and for one strange second, my mind tried to treat it like any other morning.

Breakfast.

Coffee.

Marriage.

Then the green salsa hit my legs, and the word marriage broke apart in my mouth.

I had only been married to Andrés Ramírez for three days.

Three days was not long enough for the flowers from the reception to dry, not long enough for the thank-you messages to be sent, not long enough for my mother to stop calling me “my married daughter” in that trembling, proud voice.

But it was long enough for his mother to walk into my apartment, throw boiling food onto my legs, and tell me who she believed owned the house.

The apartment was mine.

That mattered to me because my parents had saved for years to buy it before the wedding, not because they wanted to insult Andrés, but because they wanted me to enter marriage with a door that still opened for me.

Two bedrooms.

An open kitchen.

A balcony overlooking jacaranda trees.

A hallway cabinet where I kept the deed folder, the digital lock warranty papers, the wedding receipts, and the little stack of documents my father told me never to lose.

He had touched that folder once with two fingers and said, “Camila, ownership means nothing if you hand everyone the key.”

I remembered laughing at him.

I had been so sure love made warnings unnecessary.

That is how dangerous people enter your life sometimes.

Not through a broken lock.

Through someone you love telling you cruelty is just tradition.

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