PART 2 – THE MONSTER IN MY HOUSE 😱🏠

PART 2 – THE MONSTER IN MY HOUSE 😱🏠

The nurse burst into the hallway, panic sharp in her voice.

“Mrs. Lucy! Matthew is having another episode—his vitals are spiking fast!”

Daniel grabbed my arm, steadying me against the wall. His face was pale, but his hands were shaking.

“Show me the recording,” he said urgently.

I handed him the phone. We watched together as my mother approached Matthew’s bed, opened the thermos, and poured the contents into his soup. Chloe stood behind the curtain, whispering encouragement, laughing quietly whenever Matthew coughed.

Daniel’s eyes widened in disbelief. He turned to me.

“They’ve been poisoning him,” he whispered, voice low and trembling. “Every hospital relapse. Every unexplained symptom… it was deliberate.”

I felt bile rise in my throat. My mother. My sister. The people I had trusted with Matthew, his well-being, had been plotting his suffering under my roof.

I thought about the months of unexplained hospital visits, the frustration of doctors, the fear in my son’s eyes. All of it had been orchestrated by my own blood.

Daniel reached for his phone. “We need to involve the authorities. We have evidence now.”

I nodded, my hands still shaking. “But… what if they try to hide it? Deny it? They’re clever.”

“They won’t,” he said, his jaw tight. “With this recording, plus the cameras… we have a clear pattern. We need to act immediately before Matthew has another dose.”

I grabbed my keys. “I’ll go home now. We have to catch them in the act. This… this is no longer about being polite or family loyalty. It’s about survival.”

Daniel hesitated. “Be careful. If they realize you know… they’ll try to cover it.”

I swallowed hard, nodding. Every step I took back toward the house felt like walking through fire. My heart pounded, my legs heavy, my mind racing through months of suspicion that had now transformed into undeniable proof.

When I reached the front door, I paused. The wind rattled the windows. Rain tapped on the roof. Inside, my son’s life hung in the balance, and the two women I had trusted most in the world were the monsters I’d feared.

I opened the door quietly, slipped inside, and crept toward the kitchen…

And that’s when I heard it: my mother humming softly, Chloe whispering, and the faint clink of the thermos hitting the counter.

I lifted the camera remote from my pocket. Every second counted.

The next move would determine whether Matthew survived tonight.


 

Do you want me to continue with PART 3?

For a year, I watched my eight-year-old son wither away in hospitals without a single doctor finding the cause. Yesterday, I heard my own mother say, “Just one more dose…” and I realized the monster was sleeping in my house. I didn’t scream. I recorded. And when I played the audio for my surgeon husband, his silence scared me more than their voices.
Matthew was eight years old and already knew the hospital hallways better than his school playground.
Fever.
Vomiting.
Stomach pain.
Weakness.
The same nightmare every few weeks.
One day he’d be in the living room assembling plastic toy cars, laughing with his mouth stained with chocolate. The next, he’d wake up doubled over in bed, sweating cold, with dry lips and sunken eyes.
The doctors didn’t understand.
“The tests come back strange, but inconclusive.”
“It could be something autoimmune.”
“Maybe stress.”
Stress.
To an eight-year-old child.
My name is Lucy. I live in Austin. I work at a pharmacy, and for eleven months, I learned to smile at customers while inside I was dying, thinking about my son hooked up to another IV.
My husband, Daniel, was a surgeon at the very hospital where he was being treated. At first, that gave me peace of mind. I believed that if anyone could save Matthew, it was his own dad.
But even he couldn’t find answers.
And that was breaking him.
“We need patience,” he would tell me.
“Our son doesn’t need patience, Daniel. He needs someone to find out what is happening to him.”
In the middle of everything, my mother, Teresa, and my sister, Chloe, became “my support system.”
They would arrive with broth, Jell-O, herbal teas, chopped fruit, clean blankets, and that soft voice you are grateful for when you can’t take it anymore.
“You rest, sweetheart,” my mom would say. “We’ll look after Matthew.”
I believed them.
Because a daughter doesn’t imagine that her own mother could walk into her house with food in her hands and poison in her soul.
Yesterday, I went back for a notebook I had forgotten before starting my shift at the pharmacy. Matthew was hospitalized again. Daniel had stayed with him at the hospital. I thought the house would be empty.
It wasn’t.
I opened the door carefully, soaked from the rain. I left my keys on the entryway table and walked toward the hallway.
Then I heard Chloe’s voice in the kitchen.
“As long as no one suspects, everything is going exactly how it’s supposed to.”
I stopped.
I felt a sharp pang in my chest.
Then my mother spoke.
Calm.
Cold.
As if she were discussing a recipe.
“He’s already weaker. The doctors are still clueless.”
My mouth went dry.
Chloe let out a nervous giggle.
“What if Daniel figures it out?”
My mother answered without hesitation:
“Daniel is only going to understand what it feels like to lose everything when the boy fades away.”
The world tilted around me.
I had to lean my back against the wall to keep from falling.
They weren’t talking about a neighbor.
They weren’t gossiping.
They were talking about Matthew.
My Matthew.
My son.
I covered my mouth with one hand to keep from screaming. With the other, I pulled out my cell phone. I don’t even know how I unlocked it. I just saw the red button lit up.
I was recording.
Chloe lowered her voice.
“Today too?”
“Today we just need to put the usual in his soup,” my mother said. “After that, let God decide.”
I felt like throwing up.
My own mother.
The woman who taught me how to pray.
The woman who held Matthew as a newborn.
The woman who kissed his forehead when she said he was “her favorite grandson.”
The very same one who was now talking about watching him die as if it were a well-deserved punishment.
Chloe asked something else, almost in a whisper:
“What if Lucy never forgives us?”
My mother uttered a phrase that left me frozen.
“Lucy has forgiven worse things without even knowing it.”
Right then, I realized this didn’t start with Matthew.
There was something else.
Something old.
Something buried in my own family.
I backed away slowly. Every step seemed to crash like thunder. The rain was pounding against the windows. They were still in the kitchen, planning their next visit to the hospital.
I left without fully closing the door.
I drove to the hospital with my hands gripping the steering wheel so tightly that my fingers hurt. At every traffic light, I listened to the recording again.
“We just need to put the usual…”
“When the boy fades away…”
“Lucy has forgiven worse things without even knowing it…”
I reached the hospital almost running.
Matthew’s room smelled of IV fluid, alcohol, and fear. My son was sleeping on his side, pale, holding the stuffed axolotl Daniel had bought to make him laugh. Daniel was sitting next to the bed, with a heavy beard and bloodshot eyes.
“What happened?” he asked when he saw me. “Look at your face…”
“Step outside.”
“Lucy…”
“Right now.”
I pulled him into the hallway.
There, among beeping machines and nurses walking past quickly, I played the audio for him.
At first, he frowned.
Then he stopped breathing.
After that, he turned so pale he looked like another patient.
When he heard my mother’s voice say “we just need to put the usual,” Daniel leaned heavily against the wall.
“No…” he whispered. “It can’t be.”
“It can,” I said. “Matthew gets worse every time they come over. Every time they bring him food. Every time they tell us to rest.”
Daniel covered his face with his hands.
He took too long to speak.
Too long.
And in that silence, for the first time, I felt afraid of him too.
“What do you know, Daniel?”
He lowered his hands.
His eyes were full of tears, but it wasn’t from surprise.
It was guilt.
“Lucy, listen to me…”
“No. You listen to me. If you knew something and you let my son keep getting sick, I swear to God—”
“I didn’t know it was your mom.”
I froze.
“What did you say?”
Daniel looked toward Matthew’s room, then down the hallway, as if someone might hear us.
“Months ago, I suspected someone was causing the relapses.”
The blood rushed away from my feet.
“And you didn’t tell me?”
“I didn’t have proof.”
“He’s our son!”
“That’s exactly why I couldn’t afford to be wrong.”
I raised my hand, trembling, pointing at him with my phone.
“Well, now we have proof.”
Daniel swallowed hard.
“The audio isn’t enough. We need them to try it again.”
I felt like I was going crazy.
“You want to use Matthew as bait?”
“I want to save him and put them in prison.”
“He’s your son, not a clinical case!”
He stepped closer, desperate.
“Lucy, please. If we confront them right now, they’ll deny it. They’ll make everything disappear. They’ll say you’re hysterical. That you can’t handle seeing Matthew sick.”
And the worst part was, he was right.
My mother knew how to cry better than anyone.
Chloe knew how to play the victim.
And for months, I had looked like a woman on the verge of a total breakdown.
Daniel lowered his voice.
“There are cameras in the room.”
“Since when?”
“Since two weeks ago.”
I felt another blow.
“You’ve been hiding cameras in my son’s room from me?”
“I had to confirm who was coming in.”
“And what did you see?”
Daniel didn’t answer.
“What did you see?”
He pulled out his cell phone with trembling hands. He opened a password-protected folder. He showed me a video.
It was from the night before.
My mother walking into Matthew’s room with a thermos.
Chloe closing the curtain.
And Daniel, my husband, appearing at the far end of the hallway… watching the scene unfold without stepping in.
I ran out of air.
“Daniel…”
He rushed to speak:
“It’s not what it looks like.”
But before he could explain, a nurse came running out of Matthew’s room.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *