School Called Mum Over A Lunchbox Emergency That Exposed Grandma-heuh

The phone rang at 10:37 on a Tuesday morning, and before I even picked it up, something in my chest went still.

It was not just the sound.

It was the way Janet from reception transferred the call without a word.

Image

Usually, she made a joke when school rang my desk.

Something about children saving their emergencies for when their mothers had spreadsheets open and cold tea beside them.

That morning, there was no joke.

Only a click, a breath, and then a woman’s voice asking for Mrs Patterson.

I was sitting beneath a ceiling vent that blew dry, stale air onto the back of my neck.

The printer beside my cubicle hummed as if the world had not just tilted.

My mug of tea had gone lukewarm.

Quarterly reports were spread across my desk, full of numbers that had mattered five seconds before.

“This is Headteacher Morrison from Riverside Primary,” the woman said.

Her voice was too careful.

It had the soft edges of someone choosing every word before letting it leave her mouth.

“You need to come to the school immediately,” she said. “There’s been an emergency involving Tyler.”

For a second, my brain refused to understand her.

Tyler was seven.

Seven meant dinosaur drawings, muddy shoes, toast crumbs on his jumper, and bedtime questions that somehow always began just as I was turning the light off.

Seven did not belong in the same sentence as emergency.

“Is he hurt?” I asked.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *