Nina had always believed grief was a quiet thing — something private, something endured. But when her daughter Naomi was born, Nina’s mother-in-law Denise spoke of the baby as if fate had granted her a second chance. Denise’s affection was intense but polished, wrapped in warm smiles and gentle hands that made refusal feel impolite.
When she asked for time alone with Naomi, Nina agreed, despite a faint unease she couldn’t name. It seemed harmless, a grandmother spoiling her grandchild. Yet from the very first visit, Nina felt that something invisible had shifted — not danger exactly, but a subtle rewriting of roles she hadn’t consented to.
One Sunday afternoon, Naomi returned home quieter than usual. She didn’t run into Nina’s arms or chatter about her day. Instead, she lingered in the doorway, small shoulders tense.
When Nina asked how her time with Grandma went, Naomi hesitated before whispering that she wasn’t supposed to talk about what happened there. Denise had told her their time was a secret — just for them. Nina reassured her daughter that she could always speak freely, but Naomi only clung to her, saying nothing more.
That night, Nina raised her concern with her husband Finn, but he dismissed it as imagination and fatigue. Denise, he insisted, was only being helpful. The word “helpful” lodged in Nina’s chest like a stone.
The changes continued. Naomi began humming unfamiliar lullabies, requesting foods she’d never liked before, wearing sweaters Nina had never bought. One day, Nina found an old photograph tucked into Naomi’s backpack — a smiling little girl in a yellow dress.
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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