After our daughter left for college, Travis grew distant—moody, withdrawn, and glued to the couch with his old Lakers pillow. I tried everything to reconnect, but nothing worked. He barely spoke to me, snapped over pancakes, and stormed off to sleep alone every night. One evening, curiosity—and heartbreak—got the best of me.
I ripped open the pillow and found bags of hair inside—real, labeled, human hair. Blonde, red, gray—each carefully stored with notes. My mind spiraled: Was he hiding something sinister? I called the police, terrified by what I’d discovered and unsure of who I was living with.
At the station, I watched through glass as Travis quietly confessed—not to a crime, but to a dream. His mother had died from cancer, ashamed of her synthetic wig. So he was teaching himself to make real ones, in secret, as a promise to her and a purpose for himself. The silence, the secrecy, the distance—it was grief and guilt, not betrayal.
A month later, we turned the garage into a workshop and started building something together. Travis taught me the delicate craft he’d hidden in the shadows. We donated wigs, gave others dignity, and somewhere in the process, found each other again. It wasn’t the second honeymoon I expected—but it was real, and it mattered more.