After our daughter Ellie left for college, I expected a second honeymoon with my husband, Travis — quiet dinners, movies, a return to “us.” But instead, Travis withdrew. He snapped at small things, avoided me, and eventually moved to the couch with his old Lakers pillow, guarding it like treasure. I tried to reach him — favorite meals, softener-scented shirts — but nothing helped. He became a stranger, lost in himself.
His odd behavior escalated. He stayed out late, returned with antiseptic-smelling clothes and strange packages. He spent hours in the basement, obsessing over tools and hair products. One night, I tripped near his couch, and something in me cracked. I picked up his pillow — it rustled. Inside, I found hand-stitched bags filled with human hair, labeled and organized. Notes. Measurements. Tools. My heart raced with fear.
I called the police. Officers arrived, examined everything, and then Travis came home. When confronted, he panicked, leading to his detainment for questioning. I followed to the station, shaken and unsure of what I’d uncovered. Watching behind a one-way mirror, I listened as Travis revealed his truth.
He was learning to make wigs. Not for profit, but for people like his late mother, who had lost her hair during cancer treatment. He hadn’t told me because he feared I’d think he’d lost his mind. It was grief — not madness — driving him.
A month later, that pillow was gone. Together, we turned a storage room into a wig workshop. In every strand tied, we slowly began rediscovering each other — and healing.