Father Enters Burn Unit As Daughter Whispers Stepmum’s Cruel Secret-heuh

The call came at exactly 6:12 on a January morning, while frost still clung to the windscreen and the car heater pushed dry, stale air across my face.

A paper coffee cup sat in the holder, lukewarm and forgotten before I had even taken a proper sip.

Contract folders leaned against the passenger seat, clipped and labelled and absurdly neat.

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My whole day was full of appointments I had thought were urgent until the hospital name appeared on the dashboard screen.

It only took one glowing line to make every meeting disappear.

I answered so quickly my thumb slipped.

“Mr Reynolds?” a woman asked.

Her voice was steady in the way hospital voices are steady when they are trying not to frighten you, which only makes the fear worse.

“Yes,” I said. “This is Jack Reynolds. What has happened?”

“It is about your daughter, Emily. She was admitted about twenty minutes ago. Her condition is critical. You need to come now.”

I do not remember what I said next.

I remember the car jerking away from the kerb.

I remember a driver leaning on his horn behind me.

I remember the road looking grey and endless, and my own voice sounding strange in the car as I begged every red light to turn green.

Emily was eight years old.

That was the thought that kept hitting me, over and over, as if I had only just learnt it.

Eight meant small hands tucked inside coat sleeves.

Eight meant school shoes by the front door and toast crumbs on the table.

Eight meant she should have been arguing about breakfast, not lying somewhere inside a hospital while a stranger told me to come now.

Two years earlier, Emily’s mum had died after an illness that had taken everything slowly, politely, and without mercy.

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