Mum Finds Burned Daughter In Hospital—Then Police Come For Her-Teptep

The phone rang while Amanda was standing in her kitchen, staring at a mug of tea she had made and forgotten to drink.

Rain ticked against the back window.

The kettle had clicked off minutes earlier, but the steam had already gone from the mug, leaving the surface dull and still.

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When she answered, she expected the usual awkward voice from her ex-husband’s house.

Maybe a change of pick-up time.

Maybe another complaint dressed up as concern.

Instead, a doctor said, “Your eight-year-old daughter is in critical condition—third-degree burns.”

Amanda’s hand tightened around the phone so hard her knuckles blanched.

“My daughter?” she said, though she had heard him perfectly.

“Lily,” the doctor replied.

The name turned the kitchen cold.

The rain, the tea, the half-folded school jumper on the chair, the unpaid bill near the toaster, everything ordinary in the room seemed to pull away from her at once.

The doctor kept speaking, giving details in the careful voice professionals use when they are trying not to frighten people who are already frightened beyond sense.

Hospital.

Burns unit assessment.

A&E.

Come immediately.

Amanda did not remember putting on her shoes.

She did not remember grabbing her keys from the hook by the narrow hallway door.

She only remembered the feel of the cold metal keyring biting into her palm as she ran through the rain and got into the car.

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