After A 12-Hour Shift, She Found Her Son Fed Cold Rice-Teptep

After a brutal 12-hour shift, I came home and found out my mother-in-law had fed my five-year-old son cold rice while everyone else enjoyed the £300 lobsters I had paid for.

The only thing they left me was an empty shell.

“The meat was for real family,” Carol said, as if she were discussing the washing-up.

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Then my little boy reached into his pyjama pocket and pulled out a tiny piece of lobster covered in fluff.

“It fell on the floor,” he whispered. “I saved it for you, Mummy.”

I did not cry.

Not then.

By that point, crying would have been too small for what had happened.

I had been on my feet since early morning, cutting, washing, drying, smiling, nodding, apologising to customers who changed their minds halfway through appointments, and pretending my spine was not burning.

The salon had been packed all day.

Everyone wanted something fixed before the weekend.

Grey covered, fringe corrected, roots blended, split ends trimmed, curls softened, colours rescued.

By five o’clock, my fingers were wrinkled from water and shampoo.

By seven, my shoulders felt as though someone had hung bricks from them.

By nine, I was still sweeping hair from under chairs, wiping mirrors, folding towels, and counting the tips I would normally tuck away for Leo’s school shoes or the gas bill.

I should have gone straight home.

Instead, I stood in the staff toilet with the door locked, gripping the sink, staring at my own face in the mirror.

The call from the bank had come at exactly 1:14 p.m.

I remembered the time because I had looked down at my phone while trying to eat half a sandwich behind a shelf of colour bottles.

The number was not one I recognised, but something in me answered.

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