Every night my son took a shower at 3 a.m., and I kept telling myself it was just stress—until curiosity made me look through the bathroom door and I saw something so horrifying, so familiar, and so wicked that I left his home for a retirement community before sunrise… but I

Every night, my son took a shower at 3 a.m., and I kept convincing myself it was only stress—until curiosity pushed me to look through the bathroom door and I saw something so terrifying, so familiar, and so evil that I left his home for a retirement community before dawn… but I could not leave her behind…

I am 65 years old. I moved to the city to spend my retirement living with my son. Every night at exactly 3 a.m., he takes a shower. One night, curiosity made me peek inside, and what I saw in that bathroom frightened me so badly that the very next day, I moved into a senior living facility.

Hello everyone, and welcome to the channel Solar Stories. I am 65 years old, and I moved to the city to live with my son after retiring. Every night at 3:00 in the morning, he would take a shower. One night, I became too curious and looked in. What I saw in that bathroom terrified me so deeply that I moved into a nursing home the following day.

In the little town of Pine Hollow, where I had spent my whole life, the late autumn wind carried the dry cold of early winter, cutting sharply into every corner of the house.

My name is Neala, and at 65, I had just officially stepped away from the chalk dust of the high school classroom where I had taught for decades.

That old Victorian house had seen nearly my entire life, from an eager young teacher to a widow, and now to an old woman whose hair was dusted with the frost of time.

On the mantelpiece, a photograph of my late husband, Samuel, still stood there, stern and dignified.

Thinking of him stirred a complicated feeling in my chest, a blend of sorrow and the relief of a heavy burden finally being lifted.

People often say not to speak badly of the dead, but the invisible wounds his beatings and cruel scolding left on my soul had never disappeared.

He had been a violent, controlling man who always treated our son and me like possessions that belonged only to him.

The day he learned he had terminal cancer was the same day our son, Nicholas, received his acceptance letter to a prestigious state university.

I swallowed every grievance and every resentment to care for him until he breathed his last, not because of love, but because of duty, and so Nicholas could concentrate on his studies.

The day my husband died, I did not cry even once.

I only felt the weight on my shoulders suddenly loosen, and from that day forward, my son and I had only each other.

I poured all my love and strength into raising him, taking on extra tutoring work on top of teaching to pay for his education.

Since childhood, Nicholas had been smart and decisive, but he also had a short temper, perhaps something he had inherited from his father.

Whenever I saw him frown and raise his voice, a silent fear would crawl into my heart.

I tried to guide him with all the gentleness a mother had, hoping to soften the sharp edges of his character.

In the end, Nicholas did not let me down. He graduated with honors, quickly found a good job in a large city, and eventually rose to become a regional manager for a famous corporation.

He married a gentle, kindhearted woman named Hazel.

At last, the heavy burden on my shoulders seemed to lift, and I believed that from then on I would enjoy a peaceful, comfortable life, caring for my rose bushes in the morning and walking with the other elderly women in town in the evening.

But life rarely follows the path we imagine.

That day, I was busy in my garden when the phone rang. It was Nicholas.

“Hey, Mom, what are you doing right now?”

Even through a simple greeting, his voice always carried a faint pressure.

I wiped my dirt-stained hands on my apron and laughed softly.

“I am just checking on the roses, and they are almost ready to be pruned, so is something wrong, son?”

“Mom, Hazel and I have talked it over, and I want you to get your things in order because this weekend, I am driving down to pick you up and bring you to the city to live with us.”

I went still, and the thought of leaving this place, of leaving the quiet life I knew so well, made my heart drop.

“Oh, let us not do that, son, because I am used to living here and I do not know anyone in the city, so I would not be comfortable and I would just be a bother to you and your wife.”

“What bother are you talking about, Mom?”

Nicholas’s voice carried a trace of impatience.

“It is a son’s duty to take care of his mother. Besides, what if something happened to you out there all alone in the country, as who would even know? I have already made up my mind, so please do not argue, as we have already prepared a beautiful room for you.”

His tone made a chill run down my back, because it sounded exactly like my late husband, but I still tried to decline gently.

“Nicholas, honey, I know you care about me, but I am really too old to change my environment. I will not have any friends there, no garden, and I will be bored to death.”

“What do you mean by no friends, as you will come with us and Hazel can take you out shopping and show you around. Here, I will let you talk to Hazel for a minute.”

The line went quiet for a moment, and then a clear, soft voice came through like fresh spring water flowing into the tense air.

“Mom, it is Hazel.”

“Oh, hello, dear,” I answered, my tone softening.

“Mom, please come and live with us, as our condo is spacious and it will be so much livelier with you here. Nicholas is always worried about your health and he cannot rest easy with you living all by yourself, so you can come here and I will take care of you, we can chat, and it will be so nice, Mom.”

Hazel’s voice had a strange ability to persuade, and her warmth and kindness made it difficult for me to refuse.

I knew the girl had a good heart, but I could still hear the obedience beneath her words, as if the decision had come from Nicholas and she could only follow it.

I sighed and stayed silent for a long while, my mind turning into a battlefield.

On one side was the freedom and peace I had longed for after so many storms, and on the other was duty, my love for my son, and my fear that if I refused, Nicholas would lose his temper.

I was afraid of his anger, because I had once lived inside a hell made of anger, and I did not want to face it again.

“All right, then,” I finally surrendered, “let me pack for a few days.”

“Oh, that is wonderful, and my husband will be there this weekend to pick you up,” Hazel said, joy filling her voice.

After hanging up, I stood silently in my vegetable garden, and in the days that followed, I began packing.

I did not own much, only a few old clothes, a faded photo album, and several favorite books.

As I turned through the pages of the album and looked at pictures of Nicholas’s bright childhood smile, my heart softened again.

Maybe I was thinking too much. He was my son, the boy I had raised with my own hands, and he was bringing me to live with him because he was worried about me and felt it was his responsibility.

“I should be happy,” I told myself.

I packed away my past, half a lifetime of memories, and prepared for a new journey, saying goodbye to my neighbors and old friends who had shared morning and evening conversations with me.

Everyone was happy for me, saying how fortunate I was that my son was taking me to the city to care for me in my old age, and I only smiled, though the smile was not complete.

That weekend, Nicholas arrived in a shining black luxury sedan, and when I saw my son in a tailored suit, looking every inch like a successful man, an indescribable pride rose inside me.

He moved around busily, helping me with my belongings and repeatedly asking whether I was comfortable.

Hazel came with him, and the warm family feeling temporarily swept away my uneasiness.

“Mom, look, I bought you a few things,” Nicholas said, opening the trunk to show several boxes of expensive vitamins and supplements.

“Oh, you should not have spent all this money, I do not need anything,” I scolded him lovingly.

“I do not lack money, Mom, just time to take care of you. I can only work with peace of mind if you are living with us,” he said, sounding sincere.

The car pulled away, leaving behind the small town, the old roof, and the familiar garden. On the wide highway, skyscrapers slowly rose ahead of us like giants.

The noisy, crowded energy of the city made me feel somewhat overwhelmed.

Nicholas and Hazel’s condo was on the 18th floor of an upscale residential building, far larger than I had expected, with polished hardwood floors and lavish furniture that showed expense and luxury.

Nicholas guided me into a small but fully equipped room with a window facing a green, leafy park.

“This is your room. I have had a TV and air conditioning installed for you, and if you need anything, just tell Hazel, so do not be a stranger.”

“It is wonderful, son, and thank you both so much,” I said.

Hazel carefully helped me place my clothes in the closet. That girl was always like that, constantly busy, always wearing a gentle smile.

But I noticed that whenever Nicholas was nearby, her smile looked a little stiff, and a flash of caution and fear would pass through her eyes.

The first dinner seemed warm on the surface. The meal was generous and filled with all my favorite dishes.

“Mom, eat more, as you are too thin,” Nicholas said, putting a large piece of fish into my bowl.

“I can get it myself, you eat,” I replied.

“Hazel, are you not going to get Mom some more soup, as what are you just sitting there for?”

He turned to his wife, and although his voice was not loud, it was full of authority.

Hazel flinched and quickly served me some soup. I saw her hand tremble faintly, but I pretended not to notice and smiled at her.

“Thank you, dear, and the soup is delicious,” I said.

During the entire meal, Nicholas did most of the talking. He spoke about work, about major projects, about competitive pressure, and he described his accomplishments with no humility, full of pride and satisfaction.

Hazel and I simply sat there listening, nodding from time to time.

I suddenly realized that my son was no longer the little boy who needed me to protect him. He had become a worldly man, a man with power, and he had brought that power into his own home.

That night, lying in the unfamiliar soft bed, I tossed and turned without sleeping. The sounds of the city drifted through the window: distant car horns and the faint murmur of people talking.

Everything was new, and everything made me uneasy.

I tried to comfort myself, telling myself that everything would be all right and that I only needed time to adjust.

For the first few days in my son’s luxurious condo, I believed my worries had been unnecessary. The new life was not as suffocating as I had imagined.

Instead, it seemed filled with genuine care.

In the mornings, after Nicholas left for work, Hazel would often take me to the farmers market. She would not let me carry anything and always asked what I wanted to eat.

She listened patiently to my scattered stories about my years of teaching and my old students. Sometimes, she took me to a large shopping mall and bought me a few new outfits, despite my repeated protests.

“Mom, that looks so elegant on you,” she would compliment me, her smile soft and her eyes clear, telling me that Nicholas would be so happy to see you in it.

Nicholas also acted like a devoted son. Every evening when he returned from work, no matter how tired he was, he would first come to my room to check on me.

“Mom, how are you feeling today, and do you need me to buy you more supplements?”

He bought me an electronic blood pressure monitor and explained everything carefully.

“Mom, you need to measure it twice a day, once in the morning and once at night, and have Hazel write it down in this notebook so I can check it.”

But that peace, I later realized, was only a thin surface layer.

It happened one night near the end of the month, roughly two weeks after I had moved in. The city had already fallen asleep, with only the dim glow of streetlights slipping through the window frame.

I had always been a light sleeper, often turning over in bed until the middle of the night.

When the wall clock struck three dry chimes, I was suddenly startled awake by a familiar sound occurring at a very unusual hour: rushing water.

It was the shower from the main bathroom, the one right beside my bedroom. The fierce sound of running water tore through the deep silence of the night.

“Who would be taking a shower at 3:00 in the morning?”

I listened carefully, but there were no other sounds, only that lonely, rhythmic rush of water.

Could Nicholas or Hazel be unwell and need to clean themselves off?

A thin thread of worry entered my heart. I wanted to open my door and check, but I feared disturbing them.

The water ran for about 15 minutes, then stopped suddenly, and the condo became silent again.

I could not fall back asleep that night.

The next morning at breakfast, I tried to behave as naturally as possible.

“Nicholas,” I said, looking at my son, “were you not feeling well last night, as around 3:00 in the morning, I heard someone taking a shower?”

Nicholas was reading the newspaper, his eyes never leaving the page.

“Oh, it is nothing, Mom,” he answered casually, “as this new project has been really stressful and I have been feeling antsy and restless, so I just got up to take a quick shower to cool off so I could get back to sleep.”

His explanation sounded believable, but at that moment, I saw Hazel, who was carrying a bowl of oatmeal from the kitchen, freeze for an instant, and the chopsticks in her hand almost slipped.

She quickly collected herself, placed the oatmeal on the table, and smiled as she explained for her husband.

“Yes, Mom. He has been working so hard lately and has been tossing and turning all night, so please do not worry.”

My daughter-in-law’s brief panic did not escape my eyes. As a teacher with decades of experience, I had always been sensitive to unusual expressions.

Something was wrong, but I did not push. I only finished my breakfast quietly.

I thought it had been a single incident, but I was wrong. Two nights later, exactly at 3 in the morning, the sound returned.

It was the same sound of a faucet being opened sharply, followed by the rushing, steady stream of water.

This time, an unexplainable chill passed through me.

Taking a shower in the middle of the night because of stress could be believable once, but happening again at the exact same hour was no longer coincidence.

The nights that followed became nights of waiting for that sound. As 3:00 in the morning approached, my heart would beat harder.

Sometimes the water would start, and sometimes there would be a frightening silence. That unpredictable strangeness became a kind of mental torture.

My sleep broke into pieces. I was always half awake, my ears alert for any noise, and I began watching my son and daughter-in-law more closely.

During the day, Nicholas still went to work as usual and appeared normal, but I sometimes noticed fatigue and irritability in his eyes, and he became more easily angered by small things.

I tried to carefully ask my daughter-in-law.

“Hazel, is something wrong, as you have not been looking well lately and has Nicholas done anything to you?”

She startled, then quickly waved her hands, avoiding my eyes.

“No, nothing, Mom. I am probably just not sleeping well. Nicholas is very good to me.”

Her words and her face completely contradicted each other, and I knew she was hiding something.

A vague fear began forming in my mind, a fear connected to Nicholas and those showers at three in the morning.

I could not bear it anymore, so I decided I had to speak honestly with my son again.

I chose a moment after Hazel had put the baby to sleep, when only the two of us were in the living room.

“Nicholas, sit down, as I need to talk to you,” I said, patting the sofa beside me gently.

He seemed surprised by how serious I looked, but he sat down.

“What is it, Mom?”

I breathed deeply, trying to keep my voice calm.

“Son, listen to me. I know you are under a lot of stress at work, but you cannot continue this habit of showering at 3:00 in the morning. I have looked it up, and that is the time of night when the body’s energy is at its lowest and the temperature is coldest, and 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, and you are young, with a bright future ahead of you, so you have to learn to take care of your body.”

I said everything in one breath, full of a mother’s concern. I thought he would listen, or at least explain more clearly, but he did not.

Nicholas’s face darkened, and his usual patience vanished, replaced by open irritation.

“Mom, enjoy your retirement and stop meddling in my affairs.”

The bedroom door slammed shut with a loud bang, a final and decisive statement that ended every attempt I had made to show concern.

Nicholas’s cold rejection and that slammed door felt like a bucket of ice water poured over me. From that day forward, the atmosphere in the home became heavy as lead.

Nicholas barely spoke to me. He avoided my eyes and treated me as if I were invisible.

It was then, when my attention shifted away from the strange sounds at night, that I began noticing the other person trapped in this silent tragedy: my daughter-in-law, Hazel.

One afternoon, we were cutting vegetables together in the kitchen. As Hazel reached for a basket in the upper cabinet, the sleeve of her soft blouse slipped down, exposing her pale wrist.

What I saw was a patch of purple and blue mixed with faint yellow, clearly printed on her delicate skin.

The shape of the bruise was strange. It did not look like an ordinary bump. It looked more like the mark left by five fingers gripping with great force.

My heart missed a beat, and a horrifyingly familiar feeling washed over me. I quickly took her hand, unable to keep the alarm from my voice.

“My goodness, Hazel, your wrist, what happened to your wrist?”

Hazel jumped as if shocked by electricity, pulling her hand back and hurriedly tugging her sleeve down to hide it. She was obviously flustered, her eyes darting around as though searching for a way out.

“It is, it is nothing, Mom,” she stammered, “yesterday I was in a hurry and accidentally bumped into the corner of my desk. My skin is just thin and bruises easily.”

She lowered her head, unable to meet my eyes.

It was a clumsy lie. I had lived almost 70 years, and as someone who had once been a victim of domestic violence, I knew too well the difference between a bruise from a fall and a bruise from being grabbed.

The marks on her wrist were the signature of an angry hand.

My heart tightened, and the shadow of my abusive husband suddenly appeared in front of me again. During his fits of rage, he would grab my arm and drag me, leaving exactly the same marks.

And just like Hazel now, I had once lied to neighbors and friends with absurd excuses, saying I had fallen down the stairs or bumped into a door.

History was repeating itself in the cruelest way, right before my eyes, inside my own son’s home.

I could not bring myself to expose her lie. I knew that once a victim chooses to hide, outside questioning only makes them withdraw deeper into their shell of fear.

I only said softly, “You need to be more careful next time. A woman must know how to protect herself.”

Hazel only murmured a quiet okay, then found an excuse to go to the bathroom. I watched her thin, lonely back as she walked away, and my heart ached.

My suspicion grew day by day, and I began seeing everything through a new lens, one shaped by harsh reality.

A few days later, I noticed another sign. When she woke up in the morning, she kept her head lowered and avoided talking.

When I called to her, I saw that her eyes were red and swollen, clearly from crying through the night.

Continue to Part 2 Part 1 of 3

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