A 70-year-old man marries a 20-year-old woman as his second wife to have a son, but on their wedding night an unexpected tragedy occurs…
In a quiet rural town in Oaxaca, nestled among rolling hills and fields of maize, lived Doña Tomás, a seventy-year-old man who had seen both prosperity and sorrow. Despite his age, he was considered one of the wealthiest peasants in the community. His lands stretched across valleys, his cattle grazed in abundance, and his name commanded respect—or at least recognition—among neighbors.
But wealth, as people whispered, does not fill every emptiness. Ten years earlier, Tomás had lost his first wife, Doña Rosa, a woman of strength who had given him three daughters. The daughters were married now, scattered across different households, busy with their own families. They came to visit him often, but he felt a void. For all his prosperity, he had no son to carry his surname, no heir to continue the family line in the traditional sense. This absence gnawed at him, becoming an obsession.
Though his hair was white and his back bent with time, Tomás clung to the belief that fate still owed him a boy, a son who would inherit his lands, his cattle, his pride. It was this desire that pushed him into a decision that shocked the town: he would marry again.
The Second Wife of Doña Tomás
In a quiet rural town in Oaxaca, nestled among rolling hills and fields of maize, lived Doña Tomás, a seventy-year-old man who had seen both prosperity and sorrow. Despite his age, he was considered one of the wealthiest peasants in the community. His lands stretched across valleys, his cattle grazed in abundance, and his name commanded respect—or at least recognition—among neighbors.
But wealth, as people whispered, does not fill every emptiness. Ten years earlier, Tomás had lost his first wife, Doña Rosa, a woman of strength who had given him three daughters. The daughters were married now, scattered across different households, busy with their own families. They came to visit him often, but he felt a void. For all his prosperity, he had no son to carry his surname, no heir to continue the family line in the traditional sense. This absence gnawed at him, becoming an obsession.
Though his hair was white and his back bent with time, Tomás clung to the belief that fate still owed him a boy, a son who would inherit his lands, his cattle, his pride. It was this desire that pushed him into a decision that shocked the town: he would marry again.
The Choice of Marisol
His choice fell upon Marisol, a young woman of only twenty years, daughter of a humble family in the same town. Life had not been kind to her family. Poverty lingered in every corner of their house, debts mounted, and her youngest brother suffered from a persistent illness that required medicines they could not afford.
Marisol was beautiful, her face as fresh as spring water, her hair dark and long, her eyes bright yet shadowed by hardship. Her parents, desperate and cornered by creditors, accepted Tomás’s offer. In exchange for a considerable sum of money, they promised their daughter in marriage.
Marisol did not protest loudly. She swallowed her tears, knowing that her sacrifice might be the only way to save her brother’s life and relieve her family’s burdens. On the eve of the wedding, she sat with her mother by the faint light of an oil lamp. Her voice cracked as she whispered:
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“I just hope he treats me well… I will do my duty.”
Her mother, wiping her own tears, could only nod, unable to offer more than a trembling embrace.
The Wedding
The wedding was modest in budget but spectacular in intention. Tomás wanted the whole town to witness that he was still “strong,” that he could claim a bride young enough to be his granddaughter. Musicians played lively sones, neighbors filled the church and later the courtyard, gossiping and whispering as they watched the pair exchange vows.
“Poor girl,” some women murmured, pitying Marisol.
“Look at him, at his age… ridiculous,” others mocked.
But Tomás ignored them. His chest swelled with pride as he walked beside Marisol. For him, this was not merely a marriage—it was proof that he still had vigor, that destiny had not closed the door to his dream of a son.
Marisol, her face carefully composed, smiled when expected, thanked the guests, and pretended joy. Inside, her stomach knotted with fear and resignation.
That night, the air in Tomás’s house carried the scent of roasted meats and mezcal lingering from the feast. The guests had gone home, and silence wrapped the adobe walls.
Tomás, dressed in his best clothes, poured himself a cup of a medicinal liquor, a concoction he swore would restore his youth. He looked at Marisol with anticipation, his eyes gleaming with desire and hope. Taking her hand gently, he whispered:
“Tonight we begin our new life, mi reina.”
Marisol forced a smile, her heart pounding. She followed him into the bedroom, where a large wooden bed awaited. The candles flickered, casting shadows that danced on the walls.
But before the night could unfold, tragedy struck. Tomás’s expression twisted suddenly; his breath became ragged. He clutched his chest, staggered, and collapsed onto the bed with a heavy thud.
“¡Don Tomás! What’s wrong?” Marisol cried, her voice trembling.
She rushed to his side, shaking him, but his body was already rigid, his face pale. A low moan escaped his throat, then silence. The smell of the strong liquor lingered in the air like a cruel reminder of his futile attempt to defy age.
The Chaos
Marisol screamed for help. Neighbors and relatives, still awake in the town, ran to the house. His three daughters, dressed in mourning black though the night was not yet over, burst into the room. They found Marisol weeping beside their father’s lifeless body.
The scene dissolved into chaos—shouts, sobs, hurried footsteps, and confusion. Someone called for a vehicle; Tomás was rushed to the nearest hospital. But the doctors, after brief examination, shook their heads.
“It was a fatal heart attack,” one declared. “His heart could not bear the strain.”
And just like that, the dream that had driven Tomás to remarry vanished.
The Town Reacts
The news traveled faster than the morning sun. By dawn, the entire town knew. People gathered in small groups, whispering, some with pity, others with cruel satisfaction.
“He didn’t even manage to give her a son,” they said.
“Destiny has its justice.”
“Poor girl, imagine being a widow before she even became a true wife.”
The gossip stung Marisol like invisible daggers, but she remained silent. She stared into nothingness, her tears dried, her heart numb. She remembered her words to her mother—“I will do my duty”—and felt them echo like a bitter joke.
Aftermath
The funeral was large, befitting a man of Tomás’s status. Musicians played solemn tunes, neighbors attended, and his daughters wept. Marisol stood by, her veil covering her young face, trapped between roles: too young to be a widow, yet forever branded as the second wife of a man fifty years older.
The money Tomás had paid for the marriage was enough to erase her family’s debts and fund her brother’s treatment. In that sense, her sacrifice bore fruit. Yet for Marisol, the cost was unbearable. She had traded her youth, her freedom, for a marriage that lasted less than a day and left her burdened with a reputation she would never shake off.
A Marked Future
From that night forward, Marisol carried the heavy cross of her fate. Whenever she walked through town, people looked at her with a mixture of pity and curiosity. Some called her “la viuda joven,” others whispered “la esposa de Don Tomás.”
At only twenty years old, she felt as though her life had ended before it truly began. Dreams of love, of choosing her own partner, seemed impossible. She had fulfilled her duty to her family, but in doing so, she had chained herself to a memory she wished she could forget.
The wedding night, which should have marked the beginning of a long journey together, had instead become the final chapter of Tomás’s life and the tragic opening of Marisol’s burdened existence.
Reflection
The story of Doña Tomás and Marisol became legend in the town. Some told it as a cautionary tale about pride, age, and the cruelty of destiny. Others whispered it as a scandal, fuel for gossip at markets and fiestas.
But for Marisol, it was not a story—it was her life. She carried it in silence, her gaze always distant, as though searching for something beyond the fields and mountains of Oaxaca. She was both victim and survivor, forever tied to the man who sought an heir but found only death.