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It’s something I still think about—the way doubt can creep in when someone you trust speaks with such conviction. I started questioning myself. Maybe I was overreacting. Maybe this was normal. Maybe I was seeing something that wasn’t really there.
Weeks passed, and the girl who once filled every corner of our house began to retreat into herself. Her laughter disappeared. Her energy drained away. Even her posture changed—shoulders slightly hunched, as if she was carrying something too heavy to name.
Her face lost its color. Her clothes hung looser with each passing day.
That was the worst part.
Maya had always talked to me about everything. Her friends, her fears, her crushes, her dreams. But now, conversations became short, cautious. She avoided eye contact. When I asked how she felt, she would shrug or say she was fine.
I could see it in the way she moved, in the way she paused before standing up, in the way her breath hitched sometimes when she thought no one was listening.
Whenever Robert walked into the room, Maya’s body changed—just slightly. Her shoulders stiffened. Her gaze dropped. It was subtle enough that someone not looking for it might miss it entirely.
A mother notices these things.
I told myself not to jump to conclusions. Not to imagine things that weren’t there. But the unease grew, quiet and persistent, like a whisper that refused to be silenced.
It was past midnight when I heard it—a soft, broken sound coming from Maya’s room. Not loud enough to wake the whole house, but enough to pull me from sleep instantly.
I walked down the hallway and opened her door slowly.
“Mom,” she whispered when she saw me, her voice barely there. “It hurts… I can’t make it stop.”
Not cracked—broke.
All the doubt, all the hesitation, all the moments I told myself to wait—they collapsed under the weight of what I was seeing.
I sat beside her, brushing her hair back from her damp forehead, trying to steady my voice even as panic surged through me.
“Where does it hurt?” I asked gently.
She hesitated.
Then she pressed her hand to her stomach again, wincing as if even that small movement caused pain.
“Here… it feels like something is twisting inside me.”
That was it.
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