I am nearly sixty years old, and I am married to a man thirty years younger than me.
For six years, he called me “my little wife” and brought me a glass of water every night… until the night I silently followed him to the kitchen and discovered a plot I was never meant to see.
My name is Laura Harrison, and I am 59 years old.
Six years ago, I married a man named Derek Rivers; at the time, he was only 29 years old—exactly 30 years younger than me.
We met at a gentle yoga class in Savannah, in a small studio in the historic district.
I had just retired after many years of teaching and was suffering from chronic back pain and the heavy silence left behind after the death of my previous husband, who left me not only memories but also a very comfortable financial life.
Derek was one of the instructors: he had a deep, warm voice, he was patient, and he possessed a gaze so serene that just by saying “inhale… exhale,” he managed to calm the entire room.
When he smiled, everything seemed to stop for an instant.
From the beginning, I was warned: “Laura, get a grip. A man that young doesn’t just fall in love like that. Surely he wants your money.”
And it was true that I had things that could draw attention: a spacious house in a wealthy suburb, two savings accounts, and a beachfront villa in Key West that my late husband had left me.
But Derek never asked me for a single cent.
He cooked, cleaned, gave me back massages, and called me by sweet and strangely tender names: “My little wife.”
“Sweetheart.”
“My love.”
Every night before bed, he brought me a glass of warm water with honey and chamomile.
“Drink it all, my love,” he would whisper.
“So you can sleep well. If you don’t rest, neither do I.”
And I drank it.
For six years, I believed I had finally found peace: a soft, constant love that asked for nothing in return.
Until one night.
That night, Derek said he would stay up to prepare a “herbal dessert” for some friends from his yoga class.
“You go to sleep first, my little wife,” he told me, kissing my forehead.
I nodded, turned off the light, and pretended to fall asleep.
But deep inside me, a persistent little voice, sharp as a needle, kept insisting: Follow him. I got up carefully.
The house was silent; only the hum of the refrigerator and the tick-tock of the clock on the wall could be heard.
I tiptoed down the hallway and stopped at the kitchen door.
Derek was by the counter, working while humming softly.
He poured warm water into my usual glass, the same one I had drunk from for six years.
Then he opened a drawer and took out a small, amber-colored glass vial.
My heart sank.
He tilted the vial.
One…
two…
three drops of a clear liquid fell into the glass.
Then he added honey and chamomile, stirring everything just as he always did, with a bone-chilling and terrifying calmness.
I stood there, paralyzed.
When he finished, he took the glass and headed up the stairs, straight toward the bedroom…
toward me.
I retreated quickly, ran back to bed, covered myself with the sheets, and pretended to be half-asleep.
Derek walked in.
The light from the hallway illuminated his face.
He smiled and held out the glass to me.
“Here you go, my love.”
I tried to make my voice sound normal.
“I’ll drink it in a little while.”
He looked at me for a second.
Just a second.
But that look sent a shiver down my spine, as if he were evaluating whether I would obey or not.
Then he nodded, set the glass on the nightstand, and lay down.
That night, while Derek was fast asleep, I secretly took the glass out of the room.
I poured its contents into a small jar, sealed it tightly, and hid it at the back of the closet, behind some coats I almost never wore.
The next morning, I drove straight to a private clinic and handed the sample to the lab technician.
I didn’t say much, just one sentence: “Please analyze what is inside this.”
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