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    Home » I never worried about my son talking to the statue outside — until he whispered, “Mom, the lady in blue says your medicine will hurt you.” After that, nothing added up anymore.
    Moral

    I never worried about my son talking to the statue outside — until he whispered, “Mom, the lady in blue says your medicine will hurt you.” After that, nothing added up anymore.

    WildBy Wild11/12/20259 Mins Read
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    Our son’s habit of whispering to the backyard statue used to make me smile.

    Until the day he quietly said, “Mom, the lady in blue told me your medicine is dangerous.”
    And in that moment, something in my life snapped clean in half.

    Mateo had only been with us three months. Three months since we’d brought home a thin, wide-eyed eight-year-old boy who flinched at loud noises and apologized for things he didn’t do. A child who had learned to survive more than he had ever learned to play.

    So when I first saw him sitting cross-legged beneath the Virgin Mary statue—stone blue robe, outstretched hands—I thought it was sweet. Healing, even. A quiet ritual for a child whose world had been anything but.

    I never imagined it could be a warning.

    The first time I heard him whisper to the statue, it was nothing more than a breathy murmur.
    The second time, the words prickled at the back of my neck.

    “The lady in blue says you’re tired,” he said softly, stroking the statue’s robe.
    “She says she can help you sleep.”

    I stood frozen at the kitchen doorway, dish towel in hand, watching him.
    The statue, unmoving in the shade.
    The wind, still.
    My son, whispering to stone as though it answered him.

    Kids have imaginary friends, I reminded myself. Imaginations bloom where wounds have not yet healed.

    But the fourth time… the fourth time, everything changed.

    I was sitting at the table, sorting my weekly pill organizer—beta blockers, antidepressants, and the new migraine prescription Dr. Rourke insisted I try—when Mateo padded into the room.

    He looked like any other child fresh from playing outside: messy hair, grass-stained knees…
    But his eyes—God, his eyes—were far too knowing.

    “Mom,” he said quietly, “don’t take your medicine today.”

    I chuckled lightly. “Honey, I have to. Mommy gets sick without them.”

    He shook his head with a certainty that did not belong to an eight-year-old.
    “No. The lady in blue says it’s dangerous.”

    A sharp chill scraped down my spine.

    I crouched to meet him. “Mateo… who told you that? Did someone at school—?”

    “No.”
    His voice dropped to a whisper.
    “She did. The lady by the tree.”

    The statue.

    I forced a smile, kissed his forehead, sent him off to wash his hands.
    But once he was gone, my hands refused to steady.

    That night, long after Mateo fell asleep, I reached for my new migraine pill.

    My fingers hovered above it.

    Something in my gut—instinct, fear, the echo of my son’s warning—forced me to stop.

    I turned the bottle in my hand.

    My name was printed correctly.
    The dosage looked right.
    But the pill’s imprint… it didn’t match the description on the medication website.

    My breath hitched.

    I checked again.
    Then again.
    And again.

    The pill was wrong.
    Completely wrong.

    A drug I had not been prescribed.
    A drug with side effects I shouldn’t have been anywhere near.

    My chest tightened. My vision flickered.

    Someone had given me the wrong medication.

    Not by accident.

    Suddenly, Mateo’s whisper—the lady in blue says it’s dangerous—didn’t feel like a child’s imagination.

    It felt like a lifeline.

    A warning I almost didn’t hear.
    A warning that might have saved my life.

    And as the truth began to unravel, I realized something far more terrifying:

    The danger wasn’t coming from the statue.

    It was coming from inside my own home.

    I didn’t sleep that night. The wrong pill sat on my kitchen counter in a small heap, the white tablets staring back at me like tiny accusations. I kept refreshing the online pharmaceutical database, comparing imprints, shapes, dosages. Every time, the result was the same:

    I had been given a drug I was never prescribed.

    By dawn, anxiety had twisted itself into something sharper—fear. Not paranoia, not imagination, not something supernatural. Just a dawning realization: Someone had made a mistake. And it could’ve killed me.
    I called the pharmacy as soon as they opened. The technician on the other end sounded bored until I read off the pill code. Silence followed.

    “Ma’am… those aren’t migraine meds,” she finally said. “Those are Naprazadine. They’re for severe vertigo. They can drastically lower blood pressure in people already on beta blockers.”
    My stomach dropped. I was on beta blockers.

    “So if I took them—?”
    “You could’ve collapsed. Or gone into shock.”
    I hung up, hands shaking. This wasn’t a tiny mix-up. This was dangerous.

    Mateo shuffled into the kitchen moments later, still groggy, dragging his blanket behind him. “Mom?”
    I pulled him into a hug so tight he squirmed. “Thank you,” I whispered into his hair. “You might have saved me.”
    He blinked up at me. “Did the lady in blue help?”

    I didn’t answer. Not because I believed him—because I didn’t want to encourage whatever trauma-fueled fantasy he was holding onto. Children from the foster system often developed coping mechanisms. Imaginary protectors. Voices that gave them comfort.

    But that didn’t explain how he knew about the medicine.

    Later that morning, I drove back to the pharmacy, forced a meeting with the manager, demanded answers. The manager—a balding man named Tony Malden—looked horrified as he pulled up my file.
    “This… this wasn’t an accident,” he murmured.

    My blood turned cold. “What does that mean?”
    He rotated the screen.

    The prescription number had been manually altered after being filled. Someone had overridden the system using an employee code. The same individual had dispensed a completely different drug.
    “Who did this?” I whispered.

    He swallowed. “My employee—Andrew. He shouldn’t have been anywhere near your file.”
    Andrew. My ex-husband’s brother.
    A man who still blamed me for “breaking the family.”
    A man with access to my medical records.

    A man who worked part-time at this exact pharmacy.
    Rage, betrayal, terror—everything hit at once.
    I stormed out, heart hammering, half-blinded by adrenaline. When I reached the car, Mateo was waiting in the backseat, swinging his legs.

    “Mom?” he asked softly. “Are we okay?”
    I sat beside him and took his hands gently. “Mateo… sweetheart… how did you know the medicine was dangerous?”

    He shook his head. “I told you. The lady in blue said so.”
    “No one said anything to you? No one showed you the bottle?”
    “No.”

    I wanted to press further, but his eyes—raw, earnest, vulnerable—stopped me. It didn’t matter how he knew. What mattered was why someone replaced my medication. And how far they were willing to go next.

    I didn’t go to the police immediately. I knew reporting a pharmacy technician for deliberate tampering would start an investigation, interviews, legal processes. And if Andrew had done this intentionally, he wouldn’t stop at medicine. The thought made my stomach churn.

    Back home, I locked all the doors and called my lawyer, Danielle Hayes, a woman who spoke like every sentence was a closing argument.

    The moment I told her, she said, “You need to file a report. Now.”
    I drove Mateo to my friend Lucia’s house—someone safe, someone gentle—and told him I’d pick him up soon. He clung to me before I left, something he’d never done before. Maybe he sensed my fear.

    At the police station, Detective Andrea Cole listened carefully, jaw tightening as I explained everything—from the wrong pills to the altered records to the family connection.

    “This is serious,” she said. “Intentional drug tampering is a felony. And if the suspect is connected to you personally, that raises even more flags.”

    They sent officers to question Andrew that afternoon. I thought that would be the end of it. It wasn’t.
    That night, while I was making dinner, Mateo suddenly ran to the back door.
    “She’s back,” he said.
    “Who?”

    He pointed outside, toward the Virgin Mary statue. “The lady in blue. She says we need to leave. Now.”
    “Mateo, honey—there’s no one—”

    A loud bang echoed from the front of the house. I froze. Another bang—harder.
    I grabbed Mateo, heart pounding, dragged him into the hallway. My phone vibrated with three rapid messages from Detective Cole.

    DO NOT OPEN THE DOOR.
    WE’RE ON THE WAY.
    HE’S VIOLENT.
    My blood ran icy.
    Andrew.

    I shoved a chair under the doorknob of the laundry room and pulled Mateo close. “Sweetheart, listen to me. Nothing bad is going to happen. We just need to stay quiet.”

    He buried his face in my shoulder. “Mom… the lady said he’s angry.”
    I held him tighter. Footsteps thundered across the porch. The door shook violently. Andrew’s voice erupted through the walls.

    “YOU RUINED MY LIFE, EMMA! YOU THINK YOU CAN TAKE EVERYTHING FROM ME?”
    His voice cracked with rage. Then—glass shattered. Before he could reach us, sirens filled the neighborhood. Flashing lights flooded through the windows. Officers burst in, shouting commands. Within minutes, Andrew was dragged out in handcuffs, screaming incoherently.

    Detective Cole rushed to us.
    “You’re safe,” she said gently. “We got here in time.”
    I collapsed into a chair, shaking, holding Mateo as he clung to me.

    Later, when the house quieted and the officers left, I walked Mateo to his bedroom. He looked up at me, concerned, older than his years.
    “Mom? Are you scared?”

    I smoothed his hair. “I was. But I’m okay now. Because you helped me.”
    He nodded slowly. “The lady in blue wanted you safe.”

    I knelt to his level. “Sweetheart… you don’t really see someone there, do you?”
    He hesitated, then whispered: “No. I… I just think sometimes… someone should be looking out for you.”

    My heart broke in the softest way possible. Not a vision. Not a supernatural figure. Just a child who had spent his whole life unprotected…

    Now trying to protect someone else. I pulled him into a hug, tears catching in my throat.
    “You’re safe now,” I whispered. “And so am I.”

    The next morning, the statue in the backyard stood silent and ordinary as ever—just stone and paint. But for the first time, I understood: The real miracle wasn’t a woman in blue. It was an eight-year-old boy who finally had a home…and who refused to lose it.

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