This time, I felt an inexplicable chill.
Taking a shower in the middle of the night due to stress was believable once, but for it to be repeated at the exact same time was no longer a coincidence.
The following nights were spent waiting for that sound. As 3:00 in the morning approached, my heart would pound. Sometimes the water would turn on, and other times it would be terrifyingly silent. This unpredictable anomaly became a form of mental torture for me.
My sleep became fragmented, and I was always in a state of half-slumber, my ears prickled for any sound. I began to pay closer attention to my son and daughter-in-law.
During the day, Julian went to work as usual, acting normally, but I could occasionally see traces of exhaustion and irritability in his eyes. He was quicker to anger over small things.
I tried to gently probe my daughter-in-law.
“Clara, is something wrong? You haven’t been looking well lately. Has Julian done anything to you?”
She jumped, startled, and quickly waved her hands, avoiding my gaze.
“No, nothing, Mom. I’m probably just not sleeping well. Julian is very good to me.”
Her words and her expression were in complete contradiction. I knew she was hiding something.
A vague fear began to form in my mind, a fear connected to Julian and to those three-in-the-morning showers. I couldn’t bear it any longer and decided I had to have a frank talk with my son again.
I chose a time after Clara had put the baby to bed, when it was just the two of us in the living room.
“Julian, sit down. I need to talk to you,” I said, gently patting the sofa beside me.
He seemed surprised by my seriousness, but sat down.
“What is it, Mom?”
I took a deep breath, trying to keep my voice steady.
“Son, listen to me. I know you’re under a lot of stress at work, but you cannot continue this habit of showering at 3:00 in the morning. I’ve looked it up, and that’s the time of night when the body’s energy is at its lowest and the temperature is coldest. Showering at that time is very dangerous. At best, you could catch a cold, but you could also have a stroke or even suffer sudden cardiac death. You are young, with a bright future ahead of you. You have to learn to take care of your body.”
I said it all in one breath, filled with all of a mother’s worry. I thought he would listen, or at least explain in more detail, but he didn’t.
Julian’s face darkened. His usual patience vanished, replaced by undisguised irritation.
“Mom, enjoy your retirement and stop meddling in my affairs.”
The door to his bedroom slammed shut with a bang, a final, definitive declaration that cut off all my attempts to show concern.
Julian’s cold rejection and the slamming door were like a bucket of ice water thrown in my face. From that day on, the atmosphere in the house was as heavy as lead. Julian barely spoke to me, avoiding my gaze and treating me like I was invisible.
It was at that moment, when my focus shifted from the strange nightly sounds, that I began to pay closer attention to the other person in this silent tragedy, my daughter-in-law, Clara.
One afternoon, we were chopping vegetables together in the kitchen. As Clara reached for a basket in an upper cabinet, the sleeve of her soft three-quarter-sleeve blouse slid down, revealing her fair wrist.
And what I saw was a patch of purple and blue mixed with faint yellow, clearly imprinted on her delicate skin. The shape of the bruise was odd, not like a normal bump, but more like the mark left by five fingers gripping with immense force.
My heart skipped a beat. A feeling so familiar it was horrifying washed over me. I quickly grabbed her hand, my voice unable to hide my alarm.
“My goodness, Clara, your wrist. What happened to your wrist?”
Clara jumped as if she’d been electrocuted, yanking her hand back and hastily pulling down her sleeve to cover it. She was clearly flustered, her eyes darting around as if searching for an escape.
“It’s… it’s nothing, Mom,” she stammered. “Yesterday I… I was in a hurry and accidentally bumped into the corner of my desk. My skin is just thin. It bruises easily.”
She kept her head down, unable to look me in the eye.
A clumsy lie. I had lived for nearly 70 years. As a former victim of domestic violence, I knew all too well the difference between a bruise from a fall and a bruise from being gripped. The marks on her wrist were the signature of an angry hand.
My heart tightened. The shadow of my abusive husband suddenly reappeared before me. During his fits of rage, he would grab my arm and drag me, leaving the exact same marks. And just like Clara now, I used to lie to neighbors and friends with absurd excuses like falling down the stairs or bumping into a door.
History was repeating itself in the most cruel way, right before my eyes in my own son’s home.
I couldn’t bring myself to expose her lie. I knew that once a victim chooses to hide, outside questioning only makes them retreat further into their shell of fear.
I just said softly, “You need to be more careful next time. A woman must know how to protect herself.”
Clara just mumbled a quiet okay and then made an excuse to go to the bathroom. I watched her slender, lonely back as she walked away, my heart aching.
My suspicions grew with each passing day. I began to see everything through a new filter, a filter of harsh reality.
A few days later, I saw another sign. When she woke up in the morning, she kept her head down, avoiding conversation. When I called out to her, I saw that her eyes were red and swollen, clearly from a long night of crying.
“Clara, what’s wrong with your eyes?” I asked with concern. “Did you not sleep well?”
This time, she seemed prepared with another lie.
“Oh, I went out on the balcony for some fresh air last night, and a mosquito or some bug must have bitten my eyelid. It was so itchy. I rubbed it, and that’s why it’s swollen.”
A bug on the 18th floor of a condo with screens on every window.
The lies were becoming more and more ridiculous.
And then there was the sound of the shower at 3:00 in the morning. The memory took me back again. After every beating, after every torment, my husband had a strange habit. He would go into the bathroom and rinse himself with cold water for a long time.
As if trying to wash away his sin, to wash away the rage that had just erupted, as if the water could cleanse him of his inner demons, allowing him to wake up the next morning as if nothing had happened.
The sound of water from the bathroom.
This time, I didn’t stay in bed. My heart was pounding so violently I could hear it in my ears. I took a deep breath, trying to calm myself. I gently threw back the covers, my feet landing on the cold floor.
Step by step, I made my way toward the bathroom without a sound. A lifetime as a teacher had taught me patience and caution, and I had never needed them more than at this moment.
The hallway was pitch black, with only a faint sliver of light seeping from under the bathroom door. As I got closer, I heard more than just the water. I heard a suppressed gasp, a faint whimper, and my son’s low, cold, threatening whisper.
“Do you dare to talk back to me again? Huh?”
My feet felt as if they were nailed to the floor. I had reached the bathroom door, and by some cruel twist of fate, it wasn’t fully closed. A small crack remained, just wide enough for me to see inside.
Trembling, I braced myself against the wall and slowly brought my eye to the crack.
The scene inside crashed into my vision. My entire body went rigid. My breathing stopped.
Under the harsh white light of the bathroom, my son Julian was standing there. He wasn’t undressed. He was still in his pajamas, but he was soaked to the bone.
And in front of him, under the rushing stream of cold water from the shower head, was Clara. She too was fully clothed in her pajamas, drenched, her long hair plastered to her pale face.
Julian had one hand tangled tightly in her hair, yanking her head back, forcing her to endure the icy torrent. His face, the face of the son I had raised, now wore the same cruel and cold rage I had seen on my husband’s face countless times.
He didn’t shout. He just held his wife firmly, and with his other hand, he slapped her hard across her pale cheek.
A sharp crack echoed over the sound of the water. Clara swayed, her body going limp, but her hair was still held tight. She didn’t dare to cry out loud. Only a suppressed, desperate whimper escaped her throat.
Her slender body shivered violently from the cold and from fear.
“Will you ever talk back to me again?” Julian repeated, his voice squeezed through clenched teeth.
My entire world collapsed. All my suspicions, all my vague fears had now become a raw, terrifying, bloody reality right before my eyes.
My first instinct was to burst in, to scream, to pull my son away, to protect Clara. But in that instant, an ice-cold current shot through my spine, locking every muscle in place.
The scene before me blurred, overlapping with another memory, a dark memory I had buried for years. I no longer saw Julian and Clara. I saw my husband, his eyes red from drink, grabbing my hair and forcing my head into the rain barrel in the backyard.
I heard his curses, felt the searing pain at the roots of my hair, the suffocating sensation of water rushing into my nose and mouth. I felt the absolute powerlessness of struggling in despair.
That bone-deep terror, resurrected after more than a decade, was stronger than maternal love, more powerful than reason. It was a conditioned reflex.
It roared in my head.
“Run. Don’t make a sound. Don’t provoke him or you’ll be next.”
My body obeyed that command. My legs didn’t rush forward. Instead, they instinctively backed away, turned, and ran.
I ran back to my room in one breath, not daring to look back. I threw myself onto the bed and pulled the covers over my head like a wounded animal seeking a hiding place. I lay there trembling all over, biting my lip to keep from crying out.
The water in the bathroom was still running, rhythmic and cruel. The background music to my family’s tragedy, to my own cowardice.
Then the memories came flooding back, unstoppable. The hellish years of living with my abusive husband flashed before my eyes. The unprovoked beatings just because a meal wasn’t to his liking or a word was said incorrectly. The long nights I held my own bruised body, crying silently, terrified my son in the next room would hear.
The mornings I had to cover the bruises on my face with foundation before going to teach, having to lie to my colleagues that I had fallen off my bike. For over a decade, I lived like that until the day he received his death sentence from the hospital.
The day he died from his illness, I didn’t cry. I only felt a sense of relief, as if a great weight had been lifted. I thought I was free, but I was wrong.
The demon had not died with my husband. It had been resurrected, possessing the very son I cherished most. I had spent a lifetime trying to correct him, to teach him not to follow in his father’s footsteps. But in the end, the violent blood still flowed in his veins.
I had failed completely and utterly.
Tears began to stream down my face, no longer held back. I wasn’t just crying for Clara. I was crying for my own tragic life, for a mother’s powerlessness, for this cruel reality.
I had escaped one cage, only to have indirectly pushed another woman into an identical one, a cage controlled by my own son.
After a long time, the water stopped. The house fell silent again, but this silence was more terrifying than the noise. It was thick with guilt and unspoken pain.
I knew that in the next room, my son was probably sleeping soundly after his cleansing, while my daughter-in-law was lying there alone, licking her physical and spiritual wounds.
I lay there. My tears dried. The fear passed. The pain settled, leaving only a bone-chilling clarity.
I couldn’t stay here. I couldn’t change my son. And I didn’t have the courage to confront him, to save Clara. I had fought that demon once in my life, and it had drained all my strength. I couldn’t fight it again.
Staying here, I would slowly wither away in guilt and fear. My only choice, the only way out for the rest of my life, was not this luxurious condo, but another place, a place where I could find peace, even if it was a lonely peace.
The next day, I had to leave. Quietly and decisively.
The night of terror gave way to an unusually clear and peaceful morning. Sunlight streamed through the window, warm and pure, a stark contrast to the festering darkness in my soul. I hadn’t slept a wink, but my mind was exceptionally clear.
The tears had run dry, and last night’s extreme fear and pain seemed to have been distilled into a cold, firm resolve.
I got out of bed, went to the bathroom, and looked at myself in the mirror. Before me was a 65-year-old woman, her hair white, her eyes sunken, her wrinkles etched with sorrow. But in those eyes, there was no longer submission or fear. It was the look of a person who had reached the depths of despair and found the only path to survival.
I calmly prepared my last breakfast here. The dining table was set as usual, but the atmosphere was suffocatingly tense. I ate quietly, slowly, and deliberately.
Then I began to speak to my two children.
“Julian, Clara,” I began, my voice not trembling in the slightest. “I have something to say.”