My daughter always remained silent whenever her stepfather bathed her… until one day I arrived home earlier than usual — and what I saw before my eyes left me paralyzed.
At first, I kept telling myself I was overthinking it.
In the quiet neighborhoods of Guadalajara, where people know each other by name and family matters rarely come to light, I was like any other mother—trying to believe that everything would be all right. That the strangeness was only temporary. That life after remarrying… was on the right track.
My daughter, Sofia, was only five years old.
She had black, curly hair, soft as silk, large, sweet eyes, and such a shy smile that the teachers at Benito Juárez Elementary School always said she was “a very sweet girl.” A good girl. Sensitive. Easily hurt.
My husband, Alejandro, came into our lives as the perfect man.
Patient. Calm. And above all… very “attentive” to Sofia.
“I will bathe her every night,” she said softly. “Children need to feel safe before going to sleep.”
And I… thanked him for it.
Really.
After long days working in a small shop in the city center, barely earning enough to support us, I thought I finally had a real family.
But then… I started noticing things.
Sofia no longer spoke like she used to.
She didn’t tell stories about school.
She didn’t smile while watching her favorite cartoons.
She didn’t run to hug me when I opened the door when I got home.
And especially…
Every time she came out of the bathroom with Alejandro, she became completely silent.
It wasn’t a normal silence.
It was a silence… as if she were keeping a secret too big for a five-year-old girl.
One night, when I raised my hand to wipe away a drop of water that remained on her shoulder, Sofia shuddered slightly.
It wasn’t strong.
It wasn’t obvious.
But it was enough to make my heart clench.
“Are you okay, my love?” I asked her.
She nodded.
But he didn’t look at me.
He just looked down at the ground.
In the following days, I began to notice small bruises on her body.
At first I thought it was because of playing.
Kids are like that.
But the bruises started appearing more frequently.
On the arms.
On the knees.
One day even on the back.
“Did you fall?” I asked him.
Sofia shook her head.
And he remained silent.
That night, I sat beside her on her small bed in our rented house on the outskirts of Guadalajara. The yellow light softly illuminated the room… but inside, everything was growing cold.
“Does anyone at school make you feel bad?” I asked quietly.
She squeezed her stuffed bunny tightly.
And then… the tears began to fall.
My heart stopped.
“Some kids… push me around,” he whispered. “They say I’m weak… and that I don’t have a real dad.”
I felt a lump in my throat.
“And why didn’t you tell me before?”
Sofia wiped away her tears, her voice so low it almost disappeared.
“Because… Uncle Alejandro says nothing’s wrong.”
No problem?
So what if a girl gets hurt? It’s not a big deal?
“Click on Part 2 to complete the story”
PART2