My husband had been in a coma for six years and couldn’t even move, yet every day I noticed that he was wearing fresh underwear: I began to grow suspicious, and one day I pretended to leave on a business trip, but instead I hid and started watching the house 😲
What I saw filled me with horror 😨😱
My husband has been in a coma for six years. During that time, our life has turned into a slow, heavy repetition of the same day, where every step is ruled by schedules, medications, and machines. The house stopped feeling like a home long ago and began to resemble a hospital room.
In the evening, the sun would sink behind the city, and through the large bedroom window the sky would fill with dark red shades. That light fell across the bed, across the neatly made white sheet that I changed almost every day. I placed my travel bag by the sofa, trying not to make any noise, though I knew the man in the bed wouldn’t hear anything anyway.
I stepped closer and looked at Mark. He lay motionless, his eyes closed, as if he were simply sleeping. The machine hummed softly, his chest rising and falling slowly. I brushed a strand of hair from his forehead and allowed myself, for just a second, to remember what he used to be like — alive, energetic, with a habit of laughing at the most inappropriate moments.
And at that very moment, I smelled something that had no place in our bedroom.
Amid the familiar scent of antiseptic and neutral shower gel, there was suddenly a foreign, sharp smell of men’s cologne. Heavy, with woody notes. And behind it — a faint but distinct trace of cigarette smoke. My stomach tightened, because no one had smoked in that house for years.
I opened the drawer with clean laundry and froze. In my hands were men’s boxers from an expensive brand, burgundy in color, new and clearly chosen with taste. I knew for certain that I hadn’t bought anything like that. A man who hadn’t gotten out of bed in six years and couldn’t control his body simply couldn’t be wearing underwear like that.
The questions rushed in at once, but I didn’t make a scene or demand explanations out loud. Instead, I pretended I was leaving on a business trip. I called a taxi, took my bag, and said goodbye to the caregiver, just as I had done dozens of times before.
In reality, I asked the driver to drop me off at a supermarket two kilometers from the house. There, I left my belongings in a locker and walked back along the old path behind the neighborhood. It was cold, dark, and silent.
I hid in the bushes across from the second-floor bedroom window and waited.
Exactly at one in the morning, something began happening in my house that filled me with absolute terror. 😱😲 I definitely hadn’t expected this… Continued in the first comment 👇👇
At exactly one o’clock, the bedroom light turned on.
At first, nothing unusual happened, and I almost began to think I had imagined it all. The bed stood in its place, the curtains were half drawn, the machine hummed quietly as always.
Mark lay motionless in the same position I left him in every night. And then he moved.
Not the way a person in a coma might twitch — not a jerk or a reflex. He calmly turned onto his side, braced his hand against the mattress, and sat up.
Slowly, confidently, without anyone’s help. I pressed my hand over my mouth to keep from screaming, because in that moment my entire reality shattered.
Mark stood up from the bed. He removed the tubes and sensors as if he had done it a thousand times before. He walked around the room, limping slightly but steadily.
He opened the closet, took out clean clothes, and began dressing like an ordinary man who simply needed to go somewhere.
A few minutes later, he went into the bathroom. I saw the light flicker in the window and heard the sound of running water. He was taking a shower. Then he returned to the bedroom, dried his hair with a towel, and sat on the edge of the bed.
Later, he went downstairs to the kitchen. I watched as he opened the refrigerator, reheated food, ate, drank water, and cleaned up the dishes after himself. That was not a sick man. That was a grown man who had been pretending to be helpless for years.
That was when it finally dawned on me what I had refused to see all this time.
He had never been completely helpless. He could do everything. And he knew perfectly well why he couldn’t get up during the day when I, the doctors, and the caregivers were around.
Six years ago, there had been that accident. A night road, speeding, alcohol, a sharp turn. The family in the other car died on the spot. Mark survived. And he knew he was guilty. He knew that if the truth came out, he would face trial and prison.
The coma became his perfect refuge.
While everyone pitied him, filled out paperwork, and paid for his care, he simply lay there and waited. Waited for the statutes of limitations to expire, for the case to be forgotten, for the world to stop remembering that accident.