I accidentally saw my daughter-in-law throw away the baby blanket that I myself had knitted for my granddaughter; I immediately pulled it out of the trash container — and at that very moment I felt that something hard was hidden inside the fabric
I saw my daughter-in-law throw my granddaughter’s blanket into the trash container. She didn’t just toss it in — she shoved it inside sharply, with a kind of anger, as if she wanted to get rid not of an object, but of the memory itself. Without thinking, I ran to the container and pulled it out.
It wasn’t just a blanket. I had knitted it myself, back when my granddaughter had just been born. Every stitch — with a prayer, with love, with hope. After the death of my husband, and then my only son, that blanket became one of the few living reminders of the past. And now it was being thrown away? Just like that?
I brought it home. My hands were trembling. I spread the blanket out on the bed, carefully smoothing the fabric, and suddenly felt something hard right in the center. A distinct rectangular lump, far too regular to be accidental.
My heart started pounding. I turned the blanket over and saw an almost invisible seam — perfectly straight, stitched with thread exactly matching the color of the fabric. Someone had opened the blanket, placed something inside, and sewn it back up so neatly that no eye would have caught it.
I was scared. I sat there for a long time, staring at that seam as if it were staring back at me. Then I took the scissors. Every cut was difficult, as if I were breaking a taboo. Thread by thread — and the fabric gave way.
I slipped my fingers inside and felt cold. Metal. A small, heavy object. I carefully pulled it out, and at that moment my breath caught. In my hands was… Continuation in the first comment
I pulled the object out completely and immediately understood what it was. A small folding knife. Old, worn, with a stiff mechanism. The blade was neatly folded, as if it had been kept that way. On the metal were dark stains that time had not washed away. Not bright, not obvious. The kind that remain when someone has tried very hard to clean everything.
I held the knife in my hands for a long time without moving. In my mind surfaced the police report about the death of my only son. “Fall down the stairs.” “Hit his head.” “No signs of a struggle.”
Back then, it seemed strange to me that there were cuts on his palms — as if he had tried to grab onto something. They explained it to me: “He caught himself on the railing.” I believed it. Now everything fell into place.
The knife was wrapped in a thin baby cloth cut from the same blanket. Someone had carefully hidden it inside and sewn it back up, knowing that I would never cut open something I had knitted for my granddaughter. Someone counted on the fact that one day it would simply be thrown away — along with the secret.
I remembered that evening. The argument. The neighbors had heard shouting. My daughter-in-law said my son was drunk, stumbled, fell. But my son didn’t drink. And the staircase in the house was too short for such a quick death.
I slowly sat down on the edge of the bed. My hands were shaking. The knife was not the murder weapon directly. It was a threat. Or an attempt to defend himself.
Now I understood why she threw the blanket away so abruptly. She wasn’t getting rid of an old thing. She was getting rid of the last piece of evidence.
I carefully put the knife aside. Not back into the blanket. Into a bag. Because now I knew: my son did not fall. Someone helped him.


