SOMEONE’S TARGETING MY DAUGHTER-IN-LAW—AND I THINK I KNOW WHY
When my son Emil died last spring, I promised him—silently, in the hospital room, just the two of us—that I’d take care of Sabine.
She’s not just my daughter-in-law. She’s family. And since losing Emil, she’s been… fragile. Quiet. Always carrying that hollow look in her eyes, like she’s just barely hanging on.
So when she called me last night, her voice trembling, I knew something was off.
“I don’t want to sound paranoid,” she whispered, “but something keeps happening at work.”
Then she told me about the bottle.
Three times this week, she’s come out to the parking lot after her shift at the clinic and found the same thing—a crumpled plastic bottle jammed between her tire and the wheel well. She thought it was trash at first. But now? She’s scared. And so am I.
Because I know what that means.
It’s an old carjacking tactic. They wait for you to start driving, hear the bottle crinkling, and when you stop and get out to check? That’s when they strike.
I didn’t tell her that, not yet. I didn’t want to frighten her more.
But here’s the part that really made my stomach twist:
Sabine doesn’t drive the same route every day. She doesn’t park in the same space. Whoever’s doing this—they’re watching her.
I asked her if anyone at work has been acting strange. She hesitated. Then she said one name.
And it was someone I know.
Someone who used to be close with Emil. Too close.
I haven’t told Sabine what I suspect yet. Not until I’m sure.
But tomorrow, I’m going to that parking lot. And if I see that bottle again… I’ll know.
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