Her Mother Wanted Her Unborn Baby For The Sister She Favored-eirian

I used to think the worst thing my mother ever said to me was, “Don’t you dare get pregnant before your sister.”

She said it in the hallway of my parents’ house in Zapopan while roasted garlic and expensive wine drifted out of the dining room behind us.

The crystal glasses were chiming softly, the tile felt cold through my heels, and the chandelier made every polished surface shine as if the whole house had been staged for someone more important than me.

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Renata was in the next room with Fabián, laughing at something my father said.

My husband, Iván, was at the dining table, probably wondering why my mother had pulled me away with that pleasant smile that never reached her eyes.

I was thirty-two, a gynecologist at a private hospital in Guadalajara, and I had spent most of my adult life learning how not to fall apart in public.

That skill was useful in an operating room.

It was poisonous inside my family.

My mother adjusted the sleeve of her blazer and spoke as if she were correcting my posture.

“Listen to me,” she said. “Your father has spent years preparing something special for Renata. The house, the baby room, the garden… everything is planned for when she has her first child. Don’t you come and ruin that moment.”

For a moment, all I could hear was the chandelier buzzing above us.

“Ruin it?” I asked.

“Don’t make drama, Alejandra. You’ve always known how to manage. Renata needs more support.”

That was how things were explained in our family.

Renata needed support.

I needed discipline.

Renata had moods.

I had responsibilities.

Renata had always been the softer one, the one who got migraines before exams, cried at airport goodbyes, and needed the bigger bedroom because she “felt trapped” in the smaller one.

I was the daughter who translated documents for my father when I was fifteen, stayed late at school without asking for rides, and learned that if I needed something, I should ask only after everyone else had been cared for.

My grandmother had seen it before anyone else did.

Before she died, she left me an antique mirror with a carved wooden frame, saying it belonged in the room of the granddaughter who looked at the world clearly.

Renata cried for two days.

My mother said grief made people irrational.

By the next month, the mirror was hanging in my parents’ dining room because it “looked better” there.

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