I was in the kitchen, washing dishes. My son was at the neighbors’, and my husband was away on business. It felt like an ordinary evening—until I sensed someone standing behind me.
I turned. It was my father-in-law. His face was pale, his eyes strangely urgent.
“We need to talk,” he whispered, barely louder than the running water.
“What happened?” I asked, nervously drying my hands.
He stepped closer, leaned to my ear:
“While my son is away… take a hammer and break the tile behind the toilet. No one must know.”
I almost laughed. “Why ruin the renovation? We’re selling this house soon—”
But he cut me off, gripping my fingers with his bony hands.
“Your husband is cheating on you. The truth is there.”
The fear in his eyes stopped me cold. He looked terrified—as if his very life depended on this confession.
Half an hour later, I was standing in the bathroom, door locked, hammer in hand. I stared at the flawless white tiles my husband had laid himself. What if my father-in-law has lost his mind? What if I destroy this for nothing?
Still, my hand rose.
The first blow cracked the tile. The second sent a shard clattering to the floor. My breath caught as I shone my flashlight into the opening.
A dark hole gaped back at me. Inside was a bundle wrapped in old, yellowed plastic. My hands trembled as I pulled it out.
For illustration purposes only
The moment I unwrapped it, I had to press my palm to my mouth to stifle a scream.
Inside were teeth. Real human teeth. Dozens—maybe hundreds.
My whole body shook. I slid to the cold floor, clutching the bag. This can’t be real. This can’t be happening.
Finally, I forced myself to my father-in-law’s room. When he saw the package, he only sighed.
“So you found it,” he murmured.
“What is this?!” My voice cracked with terror. “Whose teeth are these?!”
He lowered his gaze. Silence. Then, in a voice barely audible:
“Your husband… he is not who you think he is. He killed. Burned the bodies. But teeth don’t burn. He pulled them out… and hid them here.”
The words hit me like a blow. My husband—the devoted father, the reliable man I thought I knew.
“You knew?” I whispered.

My father-in-law finally met my eyes. There was no comfort in his expression, only exhaustion and guilt.
“I was silent for too long. But now—you must decide what to do.”
And in that moment, I understood: nothing in my life would ever be the same again.
And then, like a cruel trick of fate, I heard the front door creak open.
“Hello?” His voice — so familiar, so ordinary — floated through the house. “I’m back early. Flight was canceled.”
My blood froze.
The hammer was still on the floor. I grabbed it with shaking hands, shoving the bag of teeth under a towel in the laundry basket. I forced myself to breathe, to think. If he saw me like this — covered in dust, eyes wide with fear — he would know. And if my father-in-law was right, if my husband had truly done those things… then knowing would be fatal.
He walked down the hall, suitcase wheels rattling over the tiles. I shoved the hammer into the cabinet beneath the sink and splashed cold water on my face. When I stepped out of the bathroom, he was there, smiling that warm, boyish smile I had fallen in love with.
“Surprise,” he said, leaning down to kiss me. I forced myself not to flinch.
“Surprise,” I echoed, my voice thin.
He rolled his shoulders. “God, I’m exhausted. Feels good to be home.” His eyes flicked past me, toward the bathroom door. For one heartbeat, I thought he could smell the dust, see the missing tile, sense the secret exposed.
But then he just sighed and went to the kitchen.
Dinner. Small talk. Laughter that felt like knives in my throat. My son came home from the neighbor’s, running into his father’s arms, oblivious. And I smiled, pretended, played the part of the wife who knew nothing.
But inside me, something had shifted forever.
Later that night, when he was asleep, I crept back to the bathroom. I checked the laundry basket. The bag was still there. I tucked it into the back of my closet, behind winter coats no one ever touched.
I sat on the bed, watching his chest rise and fall in sleep. My mind replayed every moment of our marriage — the gentle gestures, the easy laughter, the steady reliability. And now, superimposed over it all, the image of burned bodies, teeth pulled one by one, a monster hiding behind a mask.
I couldn’t go to the police yet. If he sensed anything, he might vanish. Or worse. And my son — my sweet, innocent boy — needed me to be smart, not reckless.
So I made my decision.
I would play the perfect wife. I would smile and nod and keep the house immaculate. I would tuck my son into bed each night and kiss my husband good morning. I would wait, and watch, and gather everything I needed.
Because my father-in-law was right: nothing would ever be the same again.
And when the time came, when I finally moved my last piece into place…
I would be the one to end this.
Forever.