Immediately after our 15-year-old daughter’s funeral, my husband insisted that we get rid of her things, but while I was tidying her room, I found a strange note: “Mom, look under the bed and you’ll understand everything.” Peeking under the bed, I saw something terrible…
Right after the funeral of our only daughter, who had barely turned 15, life seemed to stop.
I remember standing by the grave, barely standing on my legs.
People around me were saying something, expressing condolences, but I barely heard anything. I only saw her white coffin.
After the funeral, my husband kept repeating:
“We have to throw away all her things. They’re just memories. They’ll haunt us as long as we have them in the house.”
I couldn’t understand how he could talk like that. They weren’t just things: they were her smell, her touch, her clothes, her toys. I resisted as much as I could, but after a month, I finally gave in. I decided to tidy her room, which I hadn’t entered for almost thirty days.
When I opened the door, I felt everything was the same. The air still held the faint scent of her perfume, and on the desk lay an open notebook.
I picked up each object carefully: a dress, her hair ties, her favorite book. I cried, clutching them to my chest, as if it could bring me back to her, even for a moment.
Suddenly, a small folded piece of paper fell from one of the books. My heart leaped.
I opened it and recognized my daughter’s handwriting.
On the page was written: “Mom, if you read this, look under the bed immediately and you’ll understand everything.”
I read it several times, my hands shaking. I felt a knot in my chest. What could it mean?
Gathering my strength, I knelt down and looked under the bed… and what I saw there left me in shock.
With trembling hands, I pulled an old bag from under the bed. Inside were a few things: a couple of notebooks, a small box with small items, and my daughter’s phone. That same phone my husband had said was “lost.” My heart pounded with a dark feeling.
I turned on the phone—it was still working. The first thing I opened was the messenger. There I found a chat with her friend.
Excerpts from the conversation
February 15, 10:17 PM
Daughter: I can’t take it anymore.
10:18 PM
Friend: What happened?
10:19 PM
Daughter: Dad yelled at me again. He said if Mom finds out a single word, he’ll make us both regret it…
10:21 PM
Friend: God, you’re scaring me… Did he hit you?
10:22 PM
Daughter: Yes… it’s not the first time. I have a bruise on my arm. I tell Mom it was at school, but… I’m scared.
10:24 PM
Friend: You have to tell your mom or go to the police, this is too serious!
10:26 PM
Daughter: He said he’ll kill me if I talk. I believe him; when he gets angry, it’s scary…
10:28 PM
Friend: But you can’t keep all this to yourself…
10:29 PM
Daughter: I’m telling you because I can’t tell anyone else. If something happens to me, remember: it was him.
Those words burned my hands like fire. Each message was etched in my mind. I reread them over and over again, and images appeared in my memory: her scared eyes, how she had withdrawn into herself over the past few months.
Then I realized what I had refused to believe: my daughter hadn’t left of her own free will. He became a victim of the person I considered the closest to him.







