An Everyday Routine
The sun hung low in the sky, casting a gentle orange glow across our suburban street as I finished a few last-minute chores before heading to the kitchen. The familiar sound of Lily’s footsteps echoed from the driveway. I looked up, expecting to see her, my ten-year-old whirlwind, bounding into the house, backpack flinging to the ground with unceremonious thuds. But as usual, she came in like clockwork, her little shoes scuffing against the floor, the door closing behind her with a soft thud.
She didn’t pause to take off her shoes, nor did she drop her backpack for a snack. Instead, the moment the door shut, I heard the unmistakable creak of the bathroom door opening, followed by a high-pitched click of the lock sliding into place. I could only hear the rush of water from the bathroom faucet, and it was strange how the sound filled the silence of the house.
At first, I brushed it off as a quirk of childhood. Kids get into routines all the time, right? Maybe it was just her way of unwinding after school. Perhaps she found comfort in the warm water cascading over her like a watery cocoon. But as weeks turned into months, her habit morphed into a ritual, one that spurred a sense of unease deep within me.
I watched her leave her backpack by the door one afternoon, a haphazard pile of papers and lunch boxes spilling out onto the floor. The urge to ask her about it nagged at me, but I held it back. Children need their space, after all. But the more I did nothing, the more questions piled up like laundry in need of folding.
Dinner time became an awkward silence instead of the usual family banter. I cooked, and she ate, but her focus was always diverted somewhere beyond the table. And when I finally broke that silence, I couldn’t help myself. “Sweetheart, why do you always take a shower the second you get home?”
She looked up, her mouth pulling into a bright, practiced smile that I found unsettling. “I just like being clean,” she chirped, a little too cheerfully. Her voice was light, almost artificial, as if she had rehearsed this response a thousand times.
I nodded, but the answer didn’t sit right with me. I felt it in my gut, an instinct that told me there was something more beneath the surface. Maybe it was just me being overprotective of my daughter, but as I watched her retreat down the hallway, my heart ached with a strange mixture of love and worry.