He Came Home To His Newborn And Found Bruises On His Wife-heuh

Ryan Mitchell had spent four days imagining the same small thing.

He would open the front door, put his bag down quietly, and hear his newborn son making those tiny, uncertain noises babies make when they are deciding whether the world is worth waking up for.

Emma would be in bed or on the sofa, exhausted but smiling, and he would place the soft green blanket beside her like a foolish little trophy from the journey home.

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He had pictured relief.

He had pictured tea going cold on the kitchen side, nappies stacked on the table, his wife laughing at him for buying too many pastries because he had felt guilty for leaving.

What he found instead was the front door not quite shut.

That was the first wrong thing.

A narrow line of daylight sat between the door and the frame, and the house beyond it felt too still beneath the noise of the television.

Ryan stood on the front step with a carrier bag in one hand and the blanket tucked beneath his arm, listening.

No one called out.

No one asked who it was.

Then, from somewhere upstairs, he heard a baby crying with the desperate, ragged sound of a child who had been crying for too long.

Noah.

Ryan pushed the door open.

The smell met him before the hallway did.

Stale milk, dirty dishes, unwashed cups, the sour heaviness of a house that had stopped being cared for.

A damp tea towel lay on the floor by the kitchen doorway.

Bottles stood on the counter, some empty, some still untouched, as though someone had moved them around to make the mess look accidental.

The television blared from the sitting room.

His mother, Linda, and his sister, Ashley, were asleep on the sofa under blankets.

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