It was supposed to be an ordinary evening. I was standing at the sink, rinsing dishes while the quiet hum of the faucet filled the kitchen. My son was at the neighbor’s house, my husband out running errands. Everything felt calm—until I sensed someone behind me.
I turned, startled. It was my father-in-law. His face looked unusually tense, his eyes burning with urgency.
“We need to talk,” he whispered so faintly I barely caught the words over the water.
Confused, I dried my hands. “What happened?”
He leaned closer, his voice trembling:
“As long as your son isn’t here… take a hammer. Go into the bathroom and smash the tile behind the toilet. Don’t tell anyone. Don’t ask questions. Just do it.”
I blinked at him in disbelief, half-laughing. “Why on earth would I destroy the tiles? We’re trying to sell the place soon—”
His bony fingers tightened around mine, stopping me cold.
“Your husband has lied to you. The truth is hidden there.”
The look in his eyes unnerved me—raw fear, as though confessing put his very life in danger. My pulse quickened. Against reason, curiosity began gnawing at me.
Later that evening, when the house was silent, I locked the bathroom door. My heart raced as I pulled a hammer from the closet. For a long time I just stared at the gleaming white tiles my husband had laid with such care. Am I really about to do this? What if he’s just delusional?
But my hands moved on their own.
The first blow left a hairline crack. The second shattered the tile, sending a shard clattering to the floor. I leaned in with a flashlight, and there it was—an opening carved into the wall.
Something rustled inside.
My fingers brushed against plastic. Slowly, I dragged out a brittle, yellowed bag. It looked harmless enough—until I peeked inside. My stomach lurched.