My son Paulo had only been married to Mira for a week. She was the perfect daughter-in-law—kind, respectful, and always smiling. But soon, I noticed something strange: Mira changed the bed sheets every single day.
When I asked, she said it was due to allergies. But I felt something was off.
One morning, I pretended to leave and entered their room. A strong metallic scent hit me. I lifted the sheets and found the mattress soaked in blood. Inside the drawers were bandages and a stained shirt.
I confronted Mira. Shaking and tearful, she finally confessed: Paulo had late-stage leukemia. They married knowing he had only months left. She stayed to care for him—to love him fully, even briefly.
After Paulo passed three months later, Mira never left. She helped with our food stall, treated me as her own mother, and became more than a daughter-in-law.
When people ask why she’s still with me, I say:
“She didn’t just marry my son. She became my daughter. This is her home now.”