Angela had seen her share of strange guests in all her years as a maid. It seemed nothing could surprise her anymore. That was until she noticed a little girl.
It all started on a Tuesday evening. Around 8:00 PM, a man in his forties walked into the motel. A girl of about eleven stood next to him—skinny, carrying a backpack. At first glance, they looked like father and daughter.
The girl didn’t say a word. She just stared at the floor. The man signed the register and asked for room 112 for one night. He asked not to come in to clean and… not to close the curtains.
The next night, it was the same: same man, same girl. On the third night, Angela felt a sense of unease that didn’t go away even after she went home. The girl looked increasingly depressed, and the man increasingly irritated. He was squeezing her shoulder too tightly.
On the sixth night, she made up her mind: leaving through the back entrance, she walked around the outside of the building and peered into the window of room 112. The curtain wasn’t completely closed. Only silhouettes were visible through the narrow gap… but those silhouettes were enough to make her knees buckle.
She saw the silhouette of a man leaning over a girl. The girl was sitting on the bed, her shoulders shaking. Angela stepped back from the window, her heart pounding. Everything looked… wrong.
And the next morning, at 10:19, something happened that finally confirmed her suspicions: the girl was walking next to the man, clutching her backpack so tightly that her knuckles were white. Her face was pale, her gaze guilty or frightened. She wasn’t smiling—and neither was he.
As they passed the utility room, Angela peeked out. And for the first time, she noticed that the girl was barely standing, as if she were ill. The man was holding her arm, but it didn’t look like concern.
Angela couldn’t take it anymore. For the first time in years, she broke the motel rules and quietly knocked on their door as the man left the room for his car.
And that’s when Angela saw something terrible… 
The girl opened the door herself.
“Honey… are you okay?” Angela asked.
“I just… need to lie down,” she whispered softly. “I’m feeling dizzy again.”
“Is he… a good man? Doesn’t he hurt you?” the maid asked cautiously.
The girl looked up in surprise.
“This is my dad,” she said. “And he helps me… I’m sick.”
And, as if afraid Angela wouldn’t believe her, the girl unzipped her backpack. Inside were medical containers, sterile bags, and documents.
“We come here every month,” the girl explained, “because there’s a doctor here who does my dialysis. It takes a long time… and I’m always weak afterwards.”
Angela caught her breath.
At that moment, the man returned. He saw the open backpack, Angela’s gaze, the pale girl—and understood everything.
“She was just worried,” the girl said before he could ask. “She thought… you were mean.”
The man smiled wearily, sadly, without offense.
“I’d be worried too,” he said. “She’s become so weak lately… Sometimes I worry about her myself.”
Angela froze: this was the very “medicine” she’d seen through the window yesterday. Everything suddenly came together—and became completely different.