My ten-year-old daughter Lily had a habit that slowly began to unsettle me. Every single day, the moment she stepped through the front door after school, she would drop her backpack and rush straight to the bathroom. No snack, no greeting—just the sound of the door locking behind her.
At first, I brushed it off. Kids get sweaty, I told myself. Maybe she just liked feeling fresh. But as weeks passed, the routine felt less like a preference and more like something rehearsed.
One evening, I finally asked her gently, “Why do you always bathe right away?”
Lily flashed a quick, almost too-perfect smile. “I just like to be clean,” she said.
Her answer should have comforted me. Instead, it left a quiet unease sitting in my chest. Lily was usually carefree and a little messy. That response didn’t sound like her—it sounded practiced.
About a week later, that uneasy feeling turned into something much worse.
The bathtub had started draining slowly, so I decided to clean it out. I pulled on gloves, removed the metal cover, and used a drain tool to fish out whatever was clogging it.
It snagged on something soft.
I expected a clump of hair. But when I pulled it up, I froze.
Mixed in with the tangled strands was something else—thin fibers, like fabric. As I carefully rinsed it under running water, the grime washed away, revealing a familiar pattern: pale blue plaid.
My heart dropped.
It was the same pattern as Lily’s school uniform skirt.
My hands began to shake. Clothes don’t just end up torn apart in a drain—not like this. This looked like something had been scrubbed, pulled, even damaged intentionally.
Then I saw it.
Faint but unmistakable—a brownish stain, diluted by water but still visible.
It didn’t look like dirt.
It looked like dried blood.
A chill ran through me, and I instinctively stepped back from the tub. The house was silent. Lily was still at school, completely unaware of what I had just found.
My mind scrambled for harmless explanations—a scraped knee, a nosebleed, a torn hem—but none of them explained her urgency to bathe the second she got home. Not every day. Not like that.
My hands trembling, I grabbed my phone.
I didn’t wait.
I called the school.
When the receptionist answered, I tried to keep my voice steady. “Hi, this is Lily Carter’s mom. I just… I wanted to ask if there’s been any incidents at school. Injuries, maybe? Anything unusual after classes?”
There was a pause.
Too long…………………….
