Family Left Her To Mind The House—Then Police Found Her Name-heuh

Mum announced it like she was reminding me which bin went out on Thursday.

“The dog needs feeding, and the plants need watering every single day.”

Not once did she look embarrassed.

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Not once did Dad step in.

The black suitcase beside her had already been zipped shut, bulging at the corners, with one of Jade’s bright luggage tags swinging from the handle.

The hallway smelt of damp coats, floor polish and the toast Dad had abandoned because he was too busy checking his watch.

Outside, the morning was grey and wet in that flat, steady way that made the pavement shine.

Inside, everyone moved around me as if I were part of the furniture.

A useful chair.

A spare key.

A person who could be asked to stay behind without being asked at all.

I stood by the kitchen doorway with the dog watching me from his basket.

He was old enough now that he hated disruption, and his tail thumped once, uncertainly, as if even he could feel the shape of what was happening.

Mum lifted her mug, took a sip, and added, “The hanging baskets need doing in the evening. Not midday. They’ll dry out too quickly.”

I looked at Dad.

He was folding printed booking details into the side pocket of his jacket.

I looked at Jade.

My older sister was leaning against the wall with sunglasses perched on her head, scrolling through her phone, dressed as if she had already arrived somewhere warmer and better.

“Why am I the one staying here,” I asked, “while everyone else gets to go?”

It was not a loud question.

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