His Sister Hit Our Child At Christmas And He Chose Silence-Teptep

The first thing I remember is not the slap.

It is the sound afterwards.

The polite little silence that falls in expensive rooms when everyone is waiting to see whether power will be challenged or protected.

Image

My daughter Aurora was five years old, standing beside a Christmas table too grand for any child, with one hand on her cheek and one coloured pencil rolling away from her across the polished floor.

She looked confused before she looked hurt.

That is the part I still cannot forgive.

A child should know, instantly and without needing to think, that if an adult hurts her, every decent person in the room will move towards her.

Nobody did.

Not my husband.

Not his mother.

Not a single person seated at that shining table with its gold-edged plates, white flowers, heavy glasses, and candles arranged like this was a scene from a magazine rather than the moment my marriage cracked open.

My name is Selene Vale.

For seven years, I had been trying to earn a place in a family that had decided before I arrived that I would never properly belong.

The Blackwells did not need to raise their voices.

That was one of the first things I learnt about them.

They could make a person feel small with a pause, a smile, or the careful lift of an eyebrow.

They had old money, newer money, business money, property money, and the kind of reputation that made people laugh at jokes before deciding whether they were funny.

I came from a small seaside town where the rain got into everything and my mum worked double shifts in a café.

She kept spare coins in an old mug above the cooker.

She wore the same black shoes until the soles thinned, and she never once let me go to school thinking I was less than anyone else.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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