Pregnant And Soaked In His Kitchen, Until Mum Killed The Deal-Teptep

I stopped in the doorway and forgot how to breathe.

My pregnant daughter stood barefoot on marble tiles, soaked to the skin, trembling over a sink stacked with dishes high enough to hide her face.

For a second, all I heard was the rain behind me and the thin clatter of a plate slipping against another plate in the washing-up bowl.

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Then Elena looked up.

Her hair was wet enough to drip onto her cheeks.

Her dress clung to her stomach.

Eight months pregnant, pale, swollen at the ankles, and trying to scrub a roasting tin while six men laughed in the dining room as though nothing cruel was happening ten feet away.

I had imagined many reasons she might have stopped answering my calls.

I had told myself she was tired.

I had told myself pregnancy made people private.

I had told myself not to be one of those mothers who pushed too hard at a closed door.

But thirty-two calls unanswered makes a sound in the heart.

It becomes its own alarm.

That was why I had come without warning, in my old grey coat, with my plain handbag and shoes that had seen too many wet pavements.

Now I knew why she had gone quiet.

Across the dining room, Victor sat with his glass raised.

His suit was perfect, his smile practised, his voice full of the warm confidence of a man certain that every person in the house existed to support his performance.

Around him were six businessmen in expensive suits, men with careful haircuts and careful laughs, their briefcases resting near their chairs like sleeping dogs.

Beside Victor sat his mother, Gloria.

She wore pearls heavy enough to look like armour.

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