Niece Accused Her Aunt At Graduation — Then The Phone Rang-Teptep

Odette was nine years old when her parents died, and the first thing I remember after the phone call is the rain.

It came down steadily outside the hospital near Lancaster, making everyone arrive with wet shoulders, damp shoes, and the same helpless look.

Inside, the corridor smelt of burnt coffee, floor cleaner, and old fear.

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Odette sat on a plastic chair in a yellow dress with mud on the hem.

She did not cry.

She stared at the vending machine, her small hands locked round her knees, and I remember thinking that silence can be louder than any scream.

The adults did what adults often do when grief arrives with practical questions attached.

They whispered.

They counted bedrooms.

They mentioned money.

My sister-in-law said her house was too small.

My cousin said, with a sad little tilt of the head, that traumatised children could be difficult.

My mother-in-law pulled me aside near the lifts and told me I needed to think of Cassidy, my own daughter.

“You have a family already,” she said. “Do not ruin it trying to rescue everyone.”

I looked back at Odette.

She was still staring at the vending machine.

No one had put a coat around her shoulders.

No one had asked whether she was hungry.

I brought her home.

David did not fight me.

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