Inside the modest home of Rahim Uddin, the bodies of his daughter Jhuma Akter, 21, and her husband Sohag Mia, 24, were found hanging.
The couple -- once united in love, now lifeless in silence -- left behind a child too young to understand the loss, but already touched by it in the most harrowing way.
Neighbours stood in stunned silence as police arrived. The small yard quickly filled with whispers, sorrow and the unspoken ache of ‘what went wrong?’
Sohag, a day-labourer from Chaklenggura village, had come to visit his in-laws, a visit that should have brought warmth and laughter. Instead, it ended in heartbreak.
According to police quoting locals, Jhuma and Sohag had been married for around three years with their families’ blessings. But even blessings cannot shield love from the strain of everyday struggles.
Those who knew them said the couple, like many others, had arguments -- familiar ones, sometimes sharp enough to leave scars. Just a week ago, they had another spat. But no one thought it would come to this.
This morning, their little daughter’s cries echoed too long from behind the closed door.
When Jhuma’s father, Rahim Uddin, finally opened it, he found what no parent should ever have to see — his daughter and son-in-law hanging from a wooden pile that connected two sides of the room.
There are no words for that kind of grief -- only silence, and the sobs of a child too small to know the weight of loss.
Officer-in-charge of Durgapur Police Station Md Mahmudul Hasan said police recovered the bodies and sent them to Netrakona Sadar Hospital morgue for autopsy.
“Familiar disputes might have led to the deaths,” he said, adding that preparations were underway to file a case.
As the investigation proceeds, one question lingers over this rural household like a dark cloud — what despair gripped them so tightly that they saw no way out?
In the heart of Netrakona, a small girl now waits in silence. Her life forever divided -- before the scream, and after the scream, reports UNB.