Immediately after our daughter’s funeral, my husband persistently urged me to throw away her belongings. But when I started cleaning her room, I found a strange note: “Mom, if you’re reading this, it means I’m no longer alive. Just look under the bed” 😱
When I looked under the bed, I was horrified by what I saw. 😢😨

Right after our daughter’s funeral, my husband said we needed to clear out her room and get rid of all her things. She was only 15 years old. Our only daughter.
After the funeral, I barely remembered anything. I remember only the white coffin and the feeling that everything inside me had died. People were saying things, hugging me, offering condolences, but I didn’t hear them. I just stood there, staring at one spot.
At home, my husband kept repeating the same thing over and over:
“These things need to be thrown away. They only cause pain. We need to move on.”
I couldn’t understand how he could say that. They weren’t just things. It was her. Her clothes, her scent, her room. It felt like throwing all of it away would mean betraying my own child.
I resisted for a long time. For almost a month, I didn’t go into her room. I walked past the closed door, unable to bring myself to open it.
But one day, I finally decided to do it.
When I opened the door, it felt as if time had stopped inside. Everything was exactly as she had left it. The bedspread on the bed, notebooks on the desk, a faint trace of her perfume in the air.
I began cleaning slowly. I picked up each item and cried. Her dress. Her hair ties. The book she had read over and over again. I pressed everything to my chest and couldn’t let go.
And then, suddenly, a small folded piece of paper fell out of one of her schoolbooks.
I immediately recognized her handwriting. My hands began to shake.
The note said: “Mom, if you’re reading this, look under the bed. Then you’ll understand everything.”
My breath caught. I reread those words several times. My heart was pounding so hard it felt like it would burst out of my chest. What could she have left there? And why was I supposed to understand something?
For a long time, I didn’t dare to do it. I just stood in the middle of the room, clutching the note in my hand.
Then I knelt down and looked under the bed… 😢😱 Continued in the first comment 👇👇

There was an old shoebox there. I knew for certain—it hadn’t been there before. My heart started beating even faster. I pulled the box out and placed it in front of me.
Inside were чужие вещи. Not hers. Men’s items. A belt, a watch with cracked glass, and a flash drive. Everything was neatly arranged, as if she had hidden it on purpose so I would find it.
I picked up the flash drive and sat there for a long time, unable to bring myself to turn on the laptop. When the video started playing, my hands began to tremble.
On the screen was our daughter. She was sitting in her room, speaking quietly, as if she was afraid someone might hear her. She was crying and constantly looking around.
“Mom, if you’re watching this, it means I’m no longer here,” she said. “Please believe me. I didn’t fall. It wasn’t an accident.”
I covered my mouth with my hand so I wouldn’t scream.
She said that evening she had a fierce argument with her father. She wanted to tell me the truth but didn’t have time. She said she was afraid of him, that he had forbidden her to tell anyone anything and had threatened her.
Then she showed a bruise on her arm and said he was the one who caused it. The video cut off.
I sat on the floor of her room, unable to breathe. Everything was spinning in my head. All the strange moments of the past few months suddenly came together into one terrifying picture.

I remembered how my husband insisted we get rid of her things as quickly as possible. How he wouldn’t let me go into her room. How immediately after the funeral he said we needed to move on.
He knew everything. And that was exactly why he wanted me to find nothing.
I looked into the box again. At the bottom was another note. Short.
“Mom, if you find this—don’t believe him. Go to the police. He is dangerous.”
At that moment, I realized I had no choice.
Either I would protect my daughter’s memory and tell the truth, or I would spend the rest of my life next to a man who had destroyed our family and hoped to get away with it.


