She Took Her Sick Daughter To Hospital—Then The Scan Went Silent-heuh

The kettle had clicked off, but I had not poured the water.

It sat there in the kitchen, steaming itself useless, while my fifteen-year-old daughter sat at the table with her arms locked around her stomach.

Outside, the rain dragged silver lines down the glass.

Image

Inside, my house had become the sort of quiet that tells you something is wrong before anyone admits it.

Hailey had always been the noisy one.

She filled rooms without trying, leaving trainers by the back door, camera memory cards on the sideboard, school notes folded into the pockets of every coat she owned.

She was football boots on muddy grass, music humming through a closed bedroom door, late-night messages pinging while she promised she was going to sleep.

Then, almost without warning, she became silence.

It began with nausea.

Then came the stomach pain.

Then dizziness, tiredness, and a pale, pinched look around her mouth that no amount of sleep seemed to fix.

I noticed because mothers notice the things everyone else calls nothing.

I noticed the toast left untouched.

I noticed how she stood up slowly, as if every movement had to be negotiated with her own body.

I noticed the way she tugged her hoodie down over her wrists and kept her head lowered when Mark came into the room.

At first, I told myself she was run down.

School pressure, growing pains, hormones, the ordinary storms of being fifteen.

But ordinary does not make a child press her knuckles white against a kitchen table.

Ordinary does not take the light from her eyes.

Mark refused to see it.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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