He Was 500 Miles Away When His Bloodied Daughter Was Found Outside-heuh

The hotel lobby smelt of lemon cleaner, burnt coffee, and damp wool coats when my phone began vibrating in my hand.

Outside the glass doors, rain silvered the car park lights and turned every passing headlamp into a smear.

I was 500 miles away on business, due in a client meeting at eight the next morning, with a pressed shirt hanging in the wardrobe and notes spread across the little desk in my room.

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At 12:07 a.m., none of that mattered.

Carolyn Sherwood was calling me.

Carolyn lived next door to us and noticed everything.

She knew when the post had been left sticking out of the letterbox, when a parcel had been dropped behind the bin, when Sarah forgot her cardigan on the front step after school.

She was not nosey in the cruel way.

She was the sort of neighbour who pretended she had made too much stew when she knew someone had had a hard week.

So when I answered and heard her whispering, I knew before she said a full sentence that something had gone badly wrong.

“James,” she said, “I don’t know what to do.”

I stepped away from the lift doors, my overnight bag brushing against my leg.

“What is it?”

“It’s Sarah,” she said.

My daughter’s name was small in her mouth.

“She’s sitting in your driveway.”

For one ridiculous second, I tried to make sense of it as something normal.

Sarah was eight, stubborn in the way only gentle children can be stubborn, and sometimes when she was hurt she would remove herself from the room as if dignity required it.

I pictured her cross-legged on the drive because Melissa had said no to biscuits or because bedtime had come too early.

Then Carolyn said, “There’s blood on her face.”

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