My mother-in-law never liked me, but after I had our kid, she crossed a completely unexpected line. She questioned my loyalty, so I consented to DNA. My mother-in-law never liked me, but after I had our kid, she crossed a completely unexpected line. She questioned my allegiance, so I consented to the DNA test—on one condition. She wasn’t expecting it.
Adam and I have persevered through two job losses, the bumpy launch of his firm, and years of slowly constructing a life together. I also had to deal with his mother, Denise.
From the start, Denise made me feel inferior. She never said it, but I could tell by the way she stared at me, corrected me in public, and compared me to Adam’s ex.
My family wasn’t rich or polished. No club brunches or second houses. Denise pretty much shunned us after Adam and I eloped instead of having a wedding she could control.
I hoped our son would soften her.
It seemed possible at first. One week after I gave birth, she came over, held our boy, smiled beautifully, and made all the correct noises. Then? Silence. Avoid texts and follow-ups. A strange, frigid absence.
I didn’t know the storm underlying that stillness.
Adam joined me on the couch one night after the baby fell asleep. His body language revealed him. Tense. Anxious.
Then he said, “My mom suggests a DNA test.”
He quickly explained how his parents had raised it after reading about paternity fraud, how they wanted to be “sure,” and how it would “clear the air.”
After he finished, I looked at him and asked, “Do you think we should?”
He avoided my eyes. “It wouldn’t hurt to resolve things.”
A part of me became still. I didn’t weep. No yelling. Just said, “Fine.” We’ll do. Only if we perform another DNA test.”
Adam appeared confused. “You mean what?”
“I want a test to prove you’re your dad’s biological son,” I said.
He opened his mouth. You’re serious?
As seriously as your mother accused me of cheating. She’s tested for honesty if I am.”
Adam was slow to reply. He ultimately nodded. “Alright. That’s fair.”
An straightforward cheek swab at a local lab collected our son’s DNA.
Sample from Adam’s dad? That need more imagination.
We asked his parents to supper a few days later. Denise brought her delicious fruit pie. Adam told his dad about his golfing hobby and offered him an eco-friendly toothbrush he was testing for the company.
Dad used it after dinner. We took the sample and sent both tests the next morning.
Weeks later, our son turned one. Only close family attended our party. Cake, balloons, music. It almost felt normal again.
I brought out an envelope as things wound down and the cake was nearly gone.
“We have a little surprise,” I smiled, holding it up. Since Adam and I were unsure of our son’s paternity, we did a DNA test.
Denise looked up from her wine, focused. Her smile was tiny and hopeful.
Opened the envelope and displayed the results. He’s 100% Adam’s son.”
Denise’s smile vanished.
But I continued.
Adam stood next to me and produced another envelope.
As we conducted DNA tests… Let the phrase hang, I said.
Miss Denise looked confused. What’s that?
Adam opened the envelope and froze, scanning the page. Next, he looked at his dad.
“I’m not your biological son,” he whispered.
The room went silent. Denise shook her wine glass.
She jumped up, screaming, “You had no right—!”
Adam preceded her. “No. You were wrong. My wife never done what you accused her of. You questioned her honesty. You were the only liar in this house.”
Denise stood dumbfounded. She fell into her chair and cried.
Adam’s dad remained silent. Calmly took his keys and exited the house.
Denise called frequently afterward. Good morning voicemails. Long texts. Voicemails again.
We remained silent.
However, the silence allowed me to realize that I was both angry with Denise and grieved by Adam.
He didn’t defend me. He didn’t defend me against a ridiculous charge. Even when pressured, he agreed.
It hurt the most.
We saw therapist. Everything I held in was released week after week.
“It’s not just the test,” I said. “You didn’t trust me. I felt lonely in my marriage.”
Adam didn’t argue. He nodded, glistening eyes. “I know. I’m sorry. I was cowardly, and I’ll spend my life showing I trust you.”
He’s kept his word so far.
He blocked his extended family’s negative comments. He shielded me from trouble. He listened deeply, unlike previously.
Finally, I forgive him. He owned his part, not because I forgot.
We no longer see Denise. Her final voicemail was full of half-apologies and manipulations. Discarded it halfway and blocked her phone.
Adam’s father divorced shortly after the birthday party. What happened between them is unknown, but he never contacted Denise again. He comes our home often and spoils our son like nothing changed.
Our son laughed, crawled, and walked. Life continued on.
The DNA test results? Tucked away in the drawer.
We didn’t check them again. We need not.
We know ourselves.
Importantly, we know who’s gone from that story.