Dad Removed His Wedding Ring After My Sister Destroyed My Son’s Gifts-heuh

The first present Jessica broke was the dinosaur, and somehow the sound of that cheap plastic cracking was louder than any shouting could have been.

It was not a grand gift.

It was not the sort of thing anyone would brag about buying.

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It was a green plastic T. rex from a toy aisle, with a red button underneath that made it roar when you pressed it.

Jacob had seen it three weeks before his seventh birthday while we were shopping after school, and he had stopped so suddenly beside the shelf that I nearly bumped into him.

He lifted it with both hands, pulled it close to his chest, and looked up at me with that hopeful look children try to hide when they already know money is tight.

Then, before I could say anything, he put it back.

He even smiled.

“It’s all right, Mummy,” he said.

That was the part that made me go back later.

He was seven years old, and he had already learnt to make himself smaller around bills.

So after my shift, when my feet hurt and my coat smelled faintly of rain and bus seats, I went back to the shop and bought the dinosaur.

I bought it with the sort of carefulness that only looks ordinary from the outside.

I checked the price twice.

I moved a few things around in my head.

I told myself I could stretch the groceries if I did one more pasta night.

Then I took it home and hid it at the back of the wardrobe until he was asleep.

The night I wrapped his presents, the kitchen was quiet except for the humming fridge and the faint click of the cooling kettle.

The light above the sink flickered a little, the way it had for months, and my half-finished tea sat beside my elbow going cold.

I spread the wrapping paper across the table.

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