A 10-year-old boy begged his family to take his cast off, but they thought he was exaggerating… until the babysitter broke it and revealed the truth.
The first time Tommy asked, nobody in the house treated it like an emergency.
The kitchen was warm from the oven, but not cosy.

It smelt of reheated pizza, washing powder, and the damp cardboard of his schoolbag slumped near the front door.
Rain ticked against the window in thin little taps.
A mug of tea sat beside Patricia’s phone, already cooling because she had made it, forgotten it, and then remembered she was too tired to drink it.
Tommy stood beside the table with his left arm held carefully against his middle.
The cast was clean then, white and stiff, running from his elbow to his wrist.
His classmates had signed it with thick marker pens.
Someone had drawn a wonky smiley face near the thumb side.
To most adults, it looked like exactly what it was meant to look like.
A broken arm.
A nuisance.
Four weeks of inconvenience.
Tommy was ten years old, and ten-year-old boys were not always reliable witnesses to their own discomfort.
That was what his family told themselves.
He was the sort of child who could turn a hallway into a football pitch, a pair of socks into a ball, and a quiet afternoon into a complaint from downstairs.
He hated sitting still.
He hated asking for help.
He hated being told he could not run, climb, throw, catch, or do anything one-handed without someone fussing over him.
So when he said, “Mum, please take it off,” Patricia heard boredom before fear.
She barely looked up from her phone.
“Tommy, love, we’ve been through this.”
“It hurts.”
“You broke your arm.”
“No.”
The word came out too quick, too thin.
Patricia finally raised her eyes.
Tommy’s face was pale under the kitchen light, his hair still damp from the rain on the school run.
“It hurts wrong,” he said.
From the sitting room, Andrew gave a tired little laugh.
He was half sunk into the sofa, work shirt creased, shoes still on, television murmuring low in the background.
“It hurts wrong because you don’t like being told no,” he said.
Patricia gave him a look that meant don’t start, but she did not disagree.
That was what hurt Tommy first.
Not the arm.
The ease with which they filed his fear under fussing.
The paperwork said there was no reason for panic.
The school office incident note said Tommy had fallen during break.
The clinic discharge sheet was dated Tuesday, 4:18 p.m.
It said simple fracture.
It said keep the cast dry.
It said follow-up appointment.
It said all the calm words adults like because calm words make frightening things feel managed.
Nobody asked why Tommy had stopped sleeping properly by the third night.
Nobody noticed that he had started sitting with his cast pressed to his stomach, as if he was trying to stop something shifting inside it.
Nobody wanted to hear that the pain had changed.
Pain, in a family house, can become background noise if it lasts long enough.
At first, Patricia checked on him.
She brought him water.
She put an extra pillow beneath his arm.
She told him he was brave.
Then he kept complaining.
Then she started answering before he finished speaking.
“Four weeks, Tommy.”
“The doctor said.”
“You’ll make it worse if you keep fiddling.”
“Try not to think about it.”
Andrew was less gentle.
He did not shout.
He simply turned the problem into personality.
“You’ve always been like this,” he said one evening, sorting through post by the fruit bowl.
Tommy was standing in the hallway, half hidden behind the doorframe.
Andrew did not lower his voice because he did not think there was anything cruel in what he was saying.
“He gets an idea in his head and then everyone has to live with it.”
Tommy looked down at the white plaster.
There are sentences children carry for years because the adults who say them have forgotten them by bedtime.
By the fifth night, he woke at 2:13 a.m.
The room was dark except for the grey-blue glow from the streetlamp outside.
His pyjama top was stuck to his back.
He sat on the edge of the bed and rocked slightly, holding the cast against his stomach with his good hand.
He did not call for Patricia straight away.
He had already learnt what happened when he called too often.
Instead, he tried to breathe through it.
He counted to ten.
He counted backwards.
He told himself it was normal because everyone kept saying normal like it was a plaster of its own.
The next day, the school nurse sent a note home.
Student reports unusual pressure and pain beneath cast.
Patricia found it in his folder while unpacking shopping.
There were tins on the counter, a loaf of bread still in its plastic bag, and rainwater dripping from the edge of her sleeve.
She read the note, sighed, and signed it.
Andrew glanced over her shoulder.
“He’s milking it now,” he said.
Tommy was by the coats.
He heard every word.
He did not defend himself.
That was when Clara began watching.
Clara came three evenings a week when Patricia and Andrew’s shifts or plans overlapped.
She was not bright and bouncy in the way some people expected babysitters to be.
She did not arrive with a silly voice or exaggerated smiles.
She wore plain jeans, a grey jumper, and trainers that squeaked a little on the kitchen tiles.
She listened more than she talked.
That made children either ignore her or trust her.
Tommy trusted her.
On the sixth day, while he was meant to be doing maths at the table, she noticed he had not written a single answer in ten minutes.
His pencil was in his right hand, but his eyes were on the cast.
“Show me,” she said.
He blinked.
“What?”
“Where it hurts.”
He looked towards the sitting room, even though his parents were not there.
Then he pointed near the edge of the plaster.
“Here. But not just there. Inside.”
Clara pulled out the chair beside him and sat down.
“What kind of pain?”
Tommy swallowed.
He seemed embarrassed by the seriousness of the question.
“Like something’s wrong underneath.”
She did not laugh.
She did not say don’t be silly.
She did not say, well, broken bones hurt.
She asked, “Since when?”
“The second day.”
That answer changed her face by almost nothing.
Only someone watching closely would have noticed.
Her eyes moved from Tommy’s face to his hand.
His fingers were not relaxed.
They were slightly curled, held in a way that looked protective rather than comfortable.
She looked at the cast’s edges.
She looked at the place where the padding disappeared beneath the hard plaster.
She looked at the way he flinched when she lifted her hand before she even touched him.
“Has anyone checked it since?” she asked.
“Mum says the appointment is in two weeks.”
“And at school?”
“The nurse wrote a note.”
Clara nodded slowly.
She went quiet in the way adults go quiet when they have seen just enough to become worried and not enough to be certain.
That evening, Patricia and Andrew were going out for dinner.
Patricia stood in the hallway, fixing an earring in the mirror above the little table where keys, coins, and old receipts gathered.
She told Tommy to be good.
She told him not to worry Clara.
She told Clara the follow-up appointment was already booked, so there was no need to make a drama out of the cast.
Clara said, “Right.”
It was a small word.
It did not mean agreement.
The front door closed behind them.
Their car lights slid across the wet window and moved away.
For a while, the house was ordinary.
The fridge hummed.
The wall clock ticked.
A neighbour’s gate clicked somewhere outside.
The kettle sat on its base with a little shine of water on the spout.
Tommy’s sandwich dried slowly on a plate because he had taken one bite and then stopped.
Clara washed a mug and placed it upside down on the draining board.
Behind her, Tommy said her name.
It was not loud.
It was the way a child says your name when he has already decided he is close to crying and is trying not to.
“Clara?”
She turned.
“Do you think I’m exaggerating?”
“No.”
He stared at her.
One word had done what six days of explanations had not.
It had given him back the right to believe his own body.
His mouth trembled.
“Then why doesn’t anyone believe me?”
Clara picked up the tea towel and dried her hands with care.
“Because sometimes grown-ups decide what a child is saying before the child has finished saying it.”
Tommy looked down.
“I can’t do it anymore.”
There are moments when a sensible adult is supposed to wait.
Wait for the parents.
Wait for the appointment.
Wait for permission.
Wait until nobody can blame you.
Clara looked at his face, then his fingers, then the school nurse’s note still tucked into the side of his folder.
Waiting suddenly seemed like the least responsible thing in the room.
She came to the table and knelt slightly so she was level with him.
“I’m going to check your hand again.”
He nodded.
She touched his fingers lightly.
They were warm and tense.
She asked him to wiggle them.
He tried.
Before they moved, his breathing went shallow.
She stopped.
At 8:41 p.m., she called Patricia.
It rang out.
At 8:43 p.m., she called Andrew.
It rang out.
At 8:46 p.m., she took photographs.
The cast.
The clinic discharge paper clipped to the fridge.
The school nurse’s note.
Tommy’s fingers, curled and swollen-looking under the kitchen light.
She set everything on the counter as if she were laying out a case for people who would rather be offended than frightened.
Then she stood very still.
The house seemed to hold its breath with her.
Tommy watched her from the table.
“Are you going to ring someone else?” he asked.
Clara looked at the door, then at the clock, then back at him.
“I’m going to loosen it.”
His eyes filled immediately.
“The cast?”
“Yes.”
“Mum will be angry.”
“I know.”
“Dad will be angry too.”
“I know.”
Tommy’s chin shook.
“I don’t want you to get in trouble.”
That nearly broke her.
A child in pain was still worrying about the adult who believed him.
Clara opened the junk drawer.
Inside were elastic bands, old batteries, a takeaway menu, blunt pencils, a roll of tape, and the little household scissors Patricia used for coupons and parcels.
Clara picked them up, then put them back.
The blades looked too sharp for a frightened child and too wrong for what she intended.
She took a dull butter knife from beside the sink instead.
“I’m not cutting you,” she said gently.
“I know.”
“I’m going to put pressure on the plaster, slowly, just enough to split it.”
Tommy nodded too fast.
Clara placed a folded tea towel beneath his arm.
She moved the sandwich plate aside.
She shifted the mug, the school note, and her phone so nothing would get knocked to the floor.
The room became very focused.
Not dramatic.
Not loud.
Focused.
The kind of quiet that feels louder than shouting.
“Ready?” she asked.
“No,” Tommy whispered.
She waited.
He took one shaking breath.
“Do it anyway.”
The first crack was so small Clara felt it more than heard it.
Tommy gasped.
It was a sharp, awful sound.
Clara stopped at once.
“Do you want me to stop?”
He shook his head hard, tears sliding down his cheeks.
“Please don’t.”
So she carried on.
A little pressure.
A pause.
Another breath.
Another careful push.
The plaster resisted, then gave with a dry snap that made both of them freeze.
A white piece broke away and landed on the table.
Plaster dust scattered near the untouched sandwich.
Tommy’s good hand gripped the chair so hard his knuckles turned pale.
Clara leaned closer.
She did not pull the cast open wide.
She lifted the broken edge just enough to see beneath it.
Her face changed.
It was not panic.
Panic is messy and quick.
This was worse.
Recognition.
The look of someone seeing the reason a child had been begging for days and understanding, all at once, how badly the adults had failed to listen.
At that exact second, headlights swept across the kitchen window.
The car rolled back onto the drive.
Tyres hissed over the wet ground.
A key turned in the front door.
Clara did not drop the cast.
She did not cover it.
She stayed exactly where she was, one hand near Tommy’s arm, the other braced on the table.
Tommy turned his head towards the hallway.
He looked terrified, but not guilty.
That mattered.
For nearly a week, everyone had treated him as if the problem was his reaction.
Now the problem was lying open beneath the cracked plaster.
Patricia came in first, cheeks damp from the rain, handbag on her shoulder.
She saw Tommy at the table.
She saw Clara leaning over him.
She saw the broken white pieces beside the plate.
Her face tightened before she understood anything.
“What have you done?” she said.
Andrew stepped in behind her, keys still in his hand.
He took in the butter knife, the cracked cast, the clinic paper, the school nurse’s note, and Clara’s phone face-up on the table.
His irritation arrived first because irritation was easier than fear.
“Are you serious?” he said.
Clara stood between them and Tommy without making it look like a fight.
That was her gift.
She could be immovable and still sound calm.
“I called you,” she said.
Patricia stared at her.
“You broke my son’s cast?”
“No,” Clara said. “I listened to him.”
The sentence landed harder than shouting would have done.
Tommy looked at his mother, and his voice came out small.
“I told you it wasn’t normal.”
Patricia opened her mouth, perhaps to defend herself, perhaps to say his name, perhaps to tell him not to cry.
No sound came.
Because then she looked properly.
Not at the mess.
Not at Clara.
Not at the fact that someone had disobeyed her instructions in her own kitchen.
She looked beneath the lifted edge of the cast.
The room changed around that look.
The fridge still hummed.
The clock still ticked.
Rain still tapped the glass.
But the family story, the one they had all been living inside, had split as cleanly as the plaster.
Patricia’s handbag slipped from her shoulder and hit the floor.
Andrew did not bend to pick it up.
He was staring too.
All week, he had called it fussing.
All week, he had called it milking it.
All week, he had mistaken a child’s distress for inconvenience because it asked something of him when he was tired.
Clara reached for the school nurse’s note and placed it in the middle of the table.
Her hand was steady.
That steadiness made Patricia look even more shaken.
“She wrote this,” Clara said. “He told her. He told you. He told everyone.”
Patricia gripped the back of a chair.
Tommy was crying silently now.
Not the pleading tears from earlier.
Different tears.
The kind that come when someone finally sees what you have been trying to show them, and it is almost too late to feel relieved.
Andrew took one step closer.
Clara’s shoulders lifted slightly, barely enough to notice.
A shield, without the theatre of one.
“Don’t crowd him,” she said.
Andrew stopped.
In another moment, he might have argued.
On another night, he might have told her not to speak to him like that.
But the cracked cast was on the table.
The note was on the table.
The phone photos were on the table.
And Tommy’s face was right there too, pale and wet and exhausted from having been disbelieved.
Patricia whispered, “Tommy.”
He looked at her.
She seemed to be searching for the right apology and finding that every version came too late.
“I said it hurt,” he said.
Nobody answered.
There are silences that are empty, and there are silences packed with every sentence people wish they had not said.
This was the second kind.
Clara reached for her phone again.
“I’m making another call,” she said.
Patricia nodded at once, too quickly, desperate now to be the sort of mother who agreed with help.
Andrew stared at the little broken piece of plaster by the sandwich.
It looked harmless.
That was the worst part.
From the outside, it had always looked harmless.
A cast.
A note.
A child being difficult.
A family being tired.
Ordinary things are dangerous when they teach people to stop looking closely.
Tommy shifted in his chair and winced.
Patricia moved as if to touch him, then stopped herself.
For once, she waited for permission.
“Can I stand here?” she asked.
Tommy hesitated.
Then he nodded.
She came to the side of the table, not too near, not blocking Clara, her eyes never leaving his face.
Andrew remained in the hallway with the rain on his coat and the keys still in his fist.
He looked smaller there than he had from the sofa.
Not less responsible.
Just smaller.
Clara spoke into the phone, calm and precise.
She gave Tommy’s age.
She gave the time from the clinic paper.
She gave what the nurse had written.
She gave what she had seen after loosening the cast.
Patricia flinched at every sentence.
Andrew closed his eyes once.
Tommy watched them both.
Children notice apologies before they are spoken.
They notice whether guilt turns into comfort or anger.
They notice who reaches for them and who reaches for an excuse.
When Clara ended the call, the kitchen stayed frozen.
The kettle, the mug, the tea towel, the schoolbag by the door, all the ordinary little pieces of home sat around them like witnesses.
Patricia finally bent and picked up her handbag.
Not because it mattered.
Because her hands needed something to do besides shake.
Andrew cleared his throat.
“Tommy, I—”
But Tommy interrupted him.
It was not loud.
It did not need to be.
“You heard me,” he said.
Andrew’s mouth closed.
Clara looked down at the cracked cast, then at the boy who had begged for six days to be believed.
Outside, another set of headlights turned into the street.
The light swept once across the rainy window, bright and sudden.
Everyone in the kitchen turned towards it.
And for the first time that night, Tommy was not the only one frightened of what would happen when the door opened.