Four Words From My Daughter Exposed What Grandma Had Been Hiding-Teptep

The kitchen was too bright for the sort of thing that was about to happen.

That is what I remember most.

Not the shouting afterwards.

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Not the clinic door.

Not even the orange bottle in the doctor’s hand.

I remember the grey morning light on the cupboards, the kettle cooling on its base, the mug of tea Diane had barely touched, and the courgette under my knife as if ordinary life had not just begun to split open.

My daughter Emma was four.

She had brown curls that tangled behind her ears, pink pyjamas she refused to take off on slow mornings, and a stuffed bunny that went everywhere with her.

She used to be loud in the way happy children are loud.

She would dance when adverts came on.

She would ask why clouds moved, whether carrots could ever taste like oranges, and if bunny needed a seat belt in the car.

She filled rooms.

Then, over three weeks, she began to fade from them.

At first I blamed myself for not understanding it.

Children have moods.

Children get tired.

Children go through phases that arrive without warning and leave just as quietly.

That was what I tried to tell myself when Emma stopped running down the narrow hallway and started sitting on the sofa with her head against the armrest.

It was what I told myself when she pushed away toast she normally loved.

It was what I told myself when she fell asleep with her hand still curled round a crayon.

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