My Son Put £12 Million In My Name, Then Warned Me About His Wife-heuh

The last time my son came home alive, my kitchen smelt of burnt coffee, wet wool, and something I could not name until much later.

Fear has a smell when it sits across from you at your own table.

At the time, I told myself I was being dramatic.

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Mothers are very good at talking themselves out of the truth when the truth is too heavy to lift.

Callum had texted me at 11:03 that morning.

Leaving now. Be there by 2.

No kiss at the end.

No little joke.

No explanation.

Just six clipped words, flat as a note pushed under a door.

I stared at the screen for longer than I needed to, with a basket of washing balanced against my hip and the coffee already spoiling on the hot plate.

I typed back, Drive safe.

Three dots appeared.

Then vanished.

Then nothing.

By early afternoon, the rain had turned the windows grey and blurred the small back garden until the fence, the paving slabs, and the old plant pots all looked like they belonged to someone else.

I heard his car before I saw him.

Callum had always parked carefully, even as a teenager, as if the world might mark him down for a crooked wheel.

He rang the bell.

That should have told me something.

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