I thought I was getting married to my husband, but on the first night I had to give up my bed to my mother-in-law because she was “drunk” — the next morning I found something stuck on the bedsheet that made me speechless.

I thought I was getting married to my husband, but on the first night I had to give up my bed to my mother-in-law because she was “drunk” — the next morning I found something stuck on the bedsheet that made me speechless.

On the wedding night, I was exhausted after a long day of entertaining guests, so I retreated to my room, hoping to hug my husband and sleep soundly. But as soon as I finished removing my makeup, the door opened: “Mom is too drunk, let her lie down for a bit, it’s too noisy downstairs.” My mother-in-law – a controlling, notoriously strict woman – staggered in, hugging a pillow, her breath reeking of alcohol, her shirt low-cut, her face red.

I was about to help her to the living room, but my husband stopped me: “Let Mom lie here, it’s only one night. One night. The wedding night.” I bitterly carried the pillow down to the sofa, not daring to react for fear of being branded “a new wife already rude”.

All night I tossed and turned, unable to sleep. The shadow of someone upstairs walked back and forth, the sound of wood creaking, then silence. It was almost morning when I finally fell asleep. When I woke up, it was almost 6 o’clock. I went upstairs, intending to wake my husband up and go down to greet my maternal relatives. The door was ajar. I gently pushed it open… and stood frozen.

My husband was lying with his back facing out. My mother-in-law was lying very close to him, on the same bed I had given up. I approached, intending to wake him up. But when my eyes swept across the bedsheet, I suddenly stopped. On the pure white sheet… there was a

For a second, my mind went blank. My hands trembled as I reached out to touch the sheet — the mark was fresh, unmistakable. My heart began to pound so hard I could hear it in my ears. I staggered back, knocking over the small lamp on the nightstand.

The sound made my husband stir. He turned over — his shirt was unbuttoned halfway, his hair messy. My mother-in-law groaned softly beside him and pulled the blanket up to her chest.

“Anna—what are you doing here so early?” he mumbled, his voice thick with sleep.

I stared at them both, my lips dry, words refusing to form.
“What… what happened here?” I finally managed to whisper.

He sat up, confused at first — then saw the bloodstain. His expression shifted from confusion to panic. “It’s not what you think!” he stammered. “Mom—she must’ve fallen—she—”

“Fallen?” I said, my voice shaking. “Then why were you two sleeping like that? On our bed?”

My mother-in-law suddenly sat up, clutching her head. “Stop shouting!” she snapped. “I drank too much. I told him to let me rest. You should’ve been more understanding.”

I looked between them, the stench of alcohol thick in the room, the morning light spilling through the curtains like a cruel spotlight on their shame. Something deep inside me cracked.

Without another word, I turned, walked downstairs, and packed my things. My husband followed, pleading, swearing it was all a misunderstanding. But every time I looked at him, all I could see was that crimson mark on the white sheet — the symbol of a family secret that I was never meant to see.

Later that day, when I returned to my parents’ house, a neighbor called me. “Anna,” she said hesitantly, “I didn’t know how to tell you this… but people in town have always whispered that your husband’s mother never treated him like a son — more like something else.”

My knees went weak. Suddenly, everything — his strange loyalty, her possessiveness, the way she glared whenever I touched him — made a horrifying kind of sense.

That night, I burned the wedding dress I’d worn just hours before.
And as the flames consumed the lace and silk, I whispered,
“Let the truth burn with it — and let me never look back.”

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