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One Day, My Husband Came Back From His Mother’s House, Sighed, and Suggested a Paternity Test for Our Two-Year-Old Daughter: Not for Me, but for His Mother

One day, my husband came back from his mums place, sighed, and suggested we get a paternity test for our two-year-old daughter: Not for me, for my mum.
A while ago, he came home from his mums, took a deep breath, and brought up the idea of a DNA test for our little girl: Its not about meits for my mum.
Six months before we got married, she kept telling her son, Dont marry her, shes not good enough for you! Emily, now thirty, says, her voice shaky with hurt. Shes too prettyshell run around on you! Back then, we laughed it off, joking that Michael shouldve picked a mermaid instead, so thered be no mistake. But now? Its not funny. Not one bit.
Emily doesnt think shes some stunning beautyjust a regular girl from the outskirts of Manchester who takes care of herself like anyone else. Slim, well-groomed, dresses modestly, shes always been picky about relationships and knew how to command respect. Why her mother-in-law, Mrs. Margaret, decided Emily was flighty and unfaithful remains a mystery. But that woman turned her daughter-in-laws life into a nightmare.
Theyve been married four years and have a daughter. Emilys on maternity leave, her days an endless loop of cooking, cleaning, and nappy changes. The only people she talks to are other mums at the playground. But her mother-in-law wont let up. Shes convinced Emilys cheating, watching her like a detective from a rubbish telly drama.
Shes always spied on me, Emily sighs, tears welling up. Called to check up, turned up unannounced, tried to control every move. At first, I played along, told Michael, and we laughed. But its exhausting! Ive lost my temper so many timesweve had blazing rows. Shed back off for a bit, then come back twice as bad.
The first big scene happened months after the wedding. Mrs. Margaret showed up at Emilys workplace out of the blue. No warning, no reason. She just had to confirmwas her daughter-in-law *really* working there? Or was she lying to her husband, sneaking off with lovers instead?
No idea how they even let her in! Emily says, voice trembling with anger. The building has securityvisitors need appointments. I nearly fell over when my assistant brought her to my desk: Youve got a visitor. I asked, Mrs. Margaret, what are you doing here? And she just said, Wanted to see where you work. Then she *looked around*like she was searching for something! Its an open-plan office, everyone at their computers, nothing to hide. God knows what shed have done if I had my own office.
Later, the assistant, Sophie, admitted Mrs. Margaret had grilled her. How long had Emily worked there? Was she ever late? Who did she talk to? Was there someone *special* in the office? I told her you were *married*, Sophie added, baffled. Emily was furious. That night, she unloaded on Michael: Your mums crossed a line! Talk to herthis isnt normal! The only thing she didnt do was check under the desk for a lover. But who knowsmaybe she did!
Michael seemed to have a stern word with his mum. There was a ceasefire. Mrs. Margaret only called in the evenings, asked how things were, sent homemade cakes. Emily started to think the storm had passed. She was wrong.
The next blow-up came when Emily was pregnant but still working. Home sick one day, phone off, she was asleep when violent banging on the door and endless doorbell rings woke her. I jumped up, thinking it was a fire or something! she recalls. Peeked through the peepholeand there she was! Face like thunder, kicking the door and jamming the bell. I was too scared to open it. Called Michael: Get here *now*I dont know whats happening! He made it in twenty minutes. She *waited* the whole time, just glaring at the door.
They both tore into Mrs. Margaret. Emily threatened to call the police and a psychiatrist if it happened again. Keep her away from me! she demanded. And again, things quieted down.
Emily had a baby girl, but her mother-in-law barely glanced at her granddaughter. Later, it became clear whyshe didnt believe the child was Michaels. Of course, since Im running around, how could she be his? Emily says with a bitter laugh. The reason? In Michaels family, only boys were born. A girl, in Mrs. Margarets mind, *proved* infidelity. I ignored the madness, Emily says. I dont speak to her. Michael visits once a month, but we dont go. Probably for the best. Id never trust her with my daughter.
But the worst was yet to come. One evening, Michael came back from his mums, hesitated, then suggested the paternity test. Not for me, Emily, I swear! he insisted, waving his hands. I dont doubt you. Its for *her*! So shell finally drop it. Shes lost the plot, and Im stuck in the middle!
Emily laugheda sharp, hollow sound. For *her*? she repeated, voice shaking with fury. Might as well admit you believe her! You *know* shell never stop. We could do three tests at different clinics, and shed say the doctors were paid off! I wont dance to her tuneits over.
Its just a test, Michael pressed.
*Why?* Emily stared at him, holding back tears. I know who her father is. Do *you*? If you need the test, fine. But first, we file for divorce. I wont stay with a man who doesnt trust me.
Her words hung in the air like a verdict. The familys trust was shatteredall because of a mother-in-law whose suspicions poisoned everything. Emily feels on the edge of a cliff, with no idea how to pull them back from this madness.
