
My daughter complained of severe jaw pain almost every day. She was only twelve, but she had already stopped eating normally, waking up at night in pain and crying quietly into her pillow so no one would hear.
I watched her chew carefully, how she was afraid to open her mouth too much, how she held her cheek when she thought I wasn’t looking.
My husband brushed me off. He irritably said it was “something that happens to her,” that it was just baby teeth, that all children get this way and it would go away with time. But inside, a nagging worry was growing.
I didn’t believe my husband; I felt he was hiding something. The pain was too intense, the fear in my child’s eyes too real.
And one day, after waiting for my husband to leave for work, I silently dressed my daughter, put her in the car, and drove her to the dentist.
She sat next to me, clutching her seatbelt and trying not to cry, but every jolt of the road contorted her face in pain.
In the office, the doctor was at a loss at first.
He examined her carefully, asked questions, asked her to open her mouth wider, but she couldn’t—it was too painful.
She writhed in the chair, breathing raggedly, her fingers convulsively clutching the armrests.
Then the doctor turned on the overhead light, leaned closer, and began examining the inflamed gum more carefully. His movements suddenly became slower, more careful, and his face tense.
He carefully picked up the instrument and, with an almost imperceptible movement, extracted something dark from the gum.
Then the doctor straightened up, looked at me, and quietly but clearly said, “Remain calm. I’m calling the police right now.”
When I learned exactly what was happening to my child, I was horrified.
Inside was a small black object, about the size of a grain of corn, jagged and jagged on one side, as if the body of something had been shattered.
Part of a broken tooth was clearly visible inside this dark piece. My daughter screamed in pain, and my legs gave way.
Later, in a different office, everything became clear. It wasn’t “age” or “baby teeth.” It turned out the tooth had been broken by a strong blow. And my husband had done it as a punishment, supposedly because my daughter had been misbehaving.
The remaining part of the tooth had chipped off, embedded deep in the gum, where a slow, excruciating, destructive inflammation had begun. The pain that had prevented my daughter from eating or sleeping was the result of this blow.
When the truth emerged, I found it hard to breathe. Every detail formed a terrifying picture that made me want to scream.










