I lived in the marriage for almost a year, and all that time my husband slept every night in his mother’s room, explaining that it was difficult for an elderly woman to sleep alone
But one day I couldn’t take it anymore and decided to find out what was really happening in that room — and what I saw filled me with horror.
After just one year of marriage, I still hadn’t gotten used to the fact that my husband left our bedroom every night. This strange habit started right after the honeymoon. He would lie down next to me, wait until I fell asleep, then quietly get up and disappear into his mother’s room. Sometimes he returned at dawn, sometimes not at all.
At first, I tried to convince myself that it was only temporary. My mother-in-law had recently become a widow and often complained about her poor health, about nighttime attacks, about being afraid to stay alone in the dark. My husband said she needed him. I tried to be an understanding wife and not ask unnecessary questions. But honestly, I couldn’t understand why my husband was so determined to stay alone with his mother every night.
Weeks turned into months. We barely talked in the evenings, didn’t fall asleep together, didn’t make plans. More and more often I felt not like a wife, but like a guest in a чужом house. Every time I carefully tried to talk about it, my husband repeated the same thing:
— Mom has just lost her husband. At night it’s especially hard for her. I just have to be there.
I believed him. I wanted to believe him. But there was another detail that deeply disturbed me. Every night they locked the bedroom door from the inside. Why? After all, they both knew there was no one else in the house except me.
One night I woke up to whispering in the hallway. Not loud — muted, tense. I lay still and listened as my husband once again went into his mother’s room. This time, something inside me wouldn’t let me just close my eyes. I had to know what was happening behind that closed door.
I slowly got up and followed my husband.
The light under my mother-in-law’s door was on. I stopped and looked inside. And at that moment I saw something that terrified me. I definitely wasn’t expecting this Continuation in the first comment
My mother-in-law was sitting on the bed, wrapped in a blanket, her hands were trembling. My husband stood next to her, opened a bottle of medicine, counted the drops, and whispered something soothing to her.
— Quiet, — he said. — The most important thing is that she doesn’t find out.
My mother-in-law nodded and then quietly said:
— You know… if she gets pregnant — it will be passed on to the children too.
I recoiled from the door.
Later I learned everything. My mother-in-law’s illness was rare and strange. It didn’t show itself during the day. Only at night — attacks, loss of consciousness, dangerous states in which a person could harm themselves and others. The illness was hereditary. Incurable. Passed down the direct line.
My husband had known about it since childhood. He was sick too — it’s just that his symptoms were supposed to appear later, with age. That’s why he gave the medicine at night, monitored his mother’s condition, locked the door, and hid everything from me.
And that’s exactly why he spoke so calmly about how it was “too early for us to think about having children.”
They both knew: if we had children — they would be sick too.
I sat on our bed and looked at my hands. At the ring. At the walls that I had only recently considered my home. And suddenly I understood: I hadn’t just been deceived. I had been deprived of the right to choose.
That night my husband stayed in his mother’s room again. And in the morning, I packed my things and left.


