My Sister Hid Mouse Traps In My Son’s Trainers For A Prank-Teptep

The kitchen had that false-clean smell it always got when Mum wanted the house to look calmer than it was.

Burnt toast sat in the bin under a folded tea towel.

Cheap coffee cooled beside the kettle.

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Lemon washing-up liquid clung to the air, sharp and cheerful in a room where nobody felt cheerful.

Morning light slipped through the blinds in thin, hard stripes and landed across the tile near the front door.

Ethan was sitting there on the doormat, small knees bent, trying to get his trainers on before we left.

He was six.

Six meant he still wanted approval for fastening a zip by himself.

Six meant he still believed that if he said something hurt, the adults in the room would stop everything.

My sister Carly leaned against the worktop with her phone already in her hand.

She had not raised it because something funny was happening.

She had raised it because she had arranged for something to happen.

I did not know that yet.

All I saw was the phone, the smooth smile, the perfect messy bun, and the way Ethan’s shoulders tightened when she said his name.

“Say hi, Ethan,” she said.

He gave a tiny wave without looking properly at her.

Then he bent over his shoes again.

“Carly,” I said, reaching for his backpack. “Please put the phone down.”

The please was automatic.

In our family, women were trained to soften the edges of sentences even when someone else was holding the knife.

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