Savannah Prescott had spent three days telling herself that missing her daughter was a normal part of being a working mother.
It did not feel normal.
It felt like a thread pulled too tight through her ribs, tugging every time she looked at the clock, every time another meeting ran over, every time her phone lit up and it was not a message with Emma’s small face in it.

By the last morning, Savannah had stopped pretending she was concentrating.
She smiled at the right moments, shook the right hands, answered the right questions, and counted the minutes until she could go home.
Home meant Emma.
Emma with her pink socks sliding on polished floors.
Emma with strawberry shampoo in her hair.
Emma with the fierce little arms that wrapped round Savannah’s neck as if she was trying to keep her mother from ever leaving again.
Savannah told herself she would make it up to her.
A proper breakfast the next morning.
A walk if the rain held off.
Perhaps they would put the kettle on and make hot chocolate instead of tea, because Emma liked to pretend it was a very grown-up drink if Savannah poured it into a mug rather than a plastic cup.
By the time the car turned through the iron gates, Savannah had already lived the homecoming a dozen times in her mind.
The door would open.
Emma would hear the latch.
There would be that tiny pause before she realised.
Then the charge down the hallway, all noise and limbs and joy.
Savannah would drop everything.
She would kneel in her good coat without caring about the wet floor.
She would gather her daughter against her and let the whole house come back into focus around them.
But the moment she stepped out of the car, something in the air felt wrong.
The house did not look empty.
That might have been easier.
Empty had explanations.
A trip to the shops, a walk, someone running late.
This was different.
The curtains were open.
A hall light was on though the afternoon had not yet properly darkened.
The front step was clean, too clean, with no muddy prints from Emma’s shoes and no abandoned toy left where it should not be.
Savannah thanked the driver without really hearing his reply.
The drizzle had settled in a fine mist across her coat, and the handle of her travel bag was damp beneath her palm.
She put her key into the lock.
It turned smoothly.
For one silly, grateful heartbeat, she thought she had imagined the unease.
Then the door opened.
Silence met her.
Not peaceful silence.
Not the thick, comfortable quiet of a house between noises.
It was the kind of silence that had been placed there on purpose.
Savannah stood in the hallway with her key still in her hand.
The coat hooks were full.
Emma’s school cardigan hung from one peg, buttoned wrongly as usual, one sleeve turned inside out.
Her little shoes sat beneath it, lined together heel to heel.
That was the first thing Savannah truly noticed.
Emma never lined up her shoes.
She kicked them off in opposite directions, one under the bench, one halfway towards the stairs, and then looked sincerely confused when asked where she had put them.
Someone else had done that.
Someone had straightened them.
A cold mug sat on the narrow side table, a pale ring marking the wood beneath it.
The post had been stacked into a neat pile.
Even the umbrella stand looked too orderly.
Savannah’s breath shortened.
“Emma?” she called.
Her voice was steady because she made it steady.
Mothers learn that trick quickly.
The house did not answer.
She took one step in, then another.
Her suitcase wheels clicked softly behind her before she let go of the handle.
The bag tipped and settled against her leg.
Then she heard it.
A sob.
Small enough that she almost missed it.
Not the noisy cry Emma made when she scraped a knee or felt unfairly treated over bedtime.
This was a careful sound.
A tucked-away sound.
A child trying to cry without being punished for crying.
Savannah went cold from her scalp to her fingertips.
“Emma?”
No reply.
The sound came again from the dining room.
It was closer than she had expected.
That made it worse.
If Emma had been upstairs, there would have been distance, time, stairs between Savannah and whatever had happened.
But the dining room was just beyond the hallway.
Only a doorframe.
Only a few polished steps.
Savannah’s black travel bag slipped from her hand and hit the floor with a dull thud.
The noise seemed horribly loud.
No one came rushing out.
No one called an explanation.
No adult voice said that everything was fine.
Savannah moved towards the sound.
The familiar house became strange as she walked through it.
The floor shone as it always did.
The framed photographs on the wall were straight.
A faint smell of furniture polish hung under the ordinary scent of rain and old wood.
From the kitchen came the metallic click of an electric kettle cooling after use.
Beside it, through the open doorway, Savannah glimpsed a tea towel folded over the rail and a second mug left untouched near the sink.
Two mugs.
One cold in the hall.
One cold in the kitchen.
Evidence of waiting.
Or pretending.
Savannah forced herself not to run.
Running would frighten Emma if this was somehow less terrible than it sounded.
The thought was so thin she barely believed it, but she held on anyway.
There are moments when a person will bargain with anything.
A sound.
A door.
A breath.
Savannah reached the dining-room threshold.
Her hand touched the frame.
She remembered Emma at two, hiding under that same table with a biscuit clenched in her fist, convinced no one could see her.
She remembered Emma at four, drawing purple people on the back of an envelope while Savannah answered emails.
She remembered Emma that very morning on a video call, sleepy and soft-faced, asking when Mummy would be home.
“Soon,” Savannah had said.
She had meant it.
Now soon had arrived, and the child in the next room was trying not to cry.
Savannah stepped forward.
Emma was there.
She sat at the dining table in the chair nearest the window, the one she disliked because it was too far from Savannah’s usual place.
Her feet did not reach the floor.
Her pink socks hung above the rug, toes curled inward.
Her hands were locked together in her lap.
Her eyes were swollen, her cheeks blotched and wet, but she did not move.
She looked at Savannah for half a second.
Only half.
Then her gaze flicked away, fast and frightened.
That was the moment Savannah understood that Emma was not simply upset.
Emma had been warned.
Savannah followed the direction of her daughter’s eyes.
Across the table, in Savannah’s chair, a woman sat with her back perfectly straight.
She was not flustered.
She was not embarrassed.
She did not rise like a guest caught in a private room.
She lifted her head slowly, as if Savannah were the interruption.
For a few seconds, Savannah could not make her own mind name what she was seeing.
The stranger had a mug beside her.
She had placed one hand near it, fingers relaxed, as if she had been waiting comfortably.
On the table lay a folded sheet of paper and a child’s crayon drawing turned face down.
Emma’s plate sat untouched.
The toast on it had gone hard at the edges.
Every object was ordinary.
That was what made it unbearable.
A table.
A mug.
A chair.
A crying child.
A woman sitting where Savannah should have been.
The stranger’s eyes moved over Savannah’s damp coat, her travel clothes, the suitcase abandoned in the hallway behind her.
There was no surprise in her expression.
Only assessment.
Savannah heard herself inhale.
She had questions, hundreds of them, but none would line themselves up properly.
Who are you?
Why is my daughter crying?
What have you said to her?
Why are you in my house?
Why did no one tell me?
But the first words that came out were the only ones that mattered.
“Emma, come here.”
Her daughter flinched.
It was small, but Savannah saw it.
A tiny tightening of the shoulders.
A tremor through the hands.
The kind of movement a child makes when she wants to obey and is afraid of what obedience will cost.
Savannah’s fear turned sharp.
Not loud.
Sharp.
The stranger noticed it too.
A faint smile touched her mouth, gone almost before it formed.
“Careful,” she said.
The word was soft.
Polite, even.
That made Savannah hate it more.
British politeness can be a knife when someone holds it correctly.
Savannah took another step into the room.
The old rug muffled her shoes.
The rain tapped gently against the window behind Emma.
Somewhere in the kitchen, the kettle gave one last cooling tick.
No one else appeared.
No footsteps on the stairs.
No voice from the sitting room.
The house had narrowed to the three of them and the table between them.
Savannah kept her eyes on Emma.
“Darling,” she said, and her voice almost broke on the word, “come to me.”
Emma’s face crumpled.
For one wild second Savannah thought her daughter would leap down and run.
Instead Emma shook her head once.
Not because she wanted to.
Because someone had made her believe she must.
The stranger’s hand slid towards the folded paper.
It was a deliberate movement, slow enough that Savannah could not miss it.
The paper was creased at the corners, as if it had been opened and closed more than once.
Savannah saw a smear of purple crayon on the back.
Emma’s purple crayon.
The one she used for everything important.
A house.
A cat she did not own.
A sun with too many lines.
Three people standing hand in hand.
Savannah could see only a glimpse of the drawing, but that glimpse was enough to send a new fear through her.
The figure in the middle had long hair.
The smaller figure stood beside her.
The third had been pressed so hard into the paper that the crayon had nearly torn through.
Savannah looked from the drawing to Emma.
Emma’s eyes filled again.
She made a tiny sound from behind closed lips.
A warning.
A plea.
Savannah understood then that whatever had happened in this room had not begun five minutes ago.
It had been prepared.
Someone had taken time with it.
Someone had sat with her child at this table and put words into the air Savannah was only now walking into.
The stranger tapped one finger lightly on the folded paper.
Not hard.
Just enough.
Emma’s whole body jerked as though the sound had struck her.
Savannah’s patience vanished.
“Take your hand off that,” she said.
The stranger tilted her head.
“Do you always give orders in rooms you’ve just entered?”
The sentence was calm.
Too calm.
Savannah felt the old rules of manners trying to rise in her, ridiculous and useless.
Say excuse me.
Ask properly.
Keep your voice down.
Do not make a scene.
But this was her child.
There are rooms where politeness has to get out of the way.
Savannah moved round the table.
Emma watched her with wide, wet eyes.
The stranger did not stand.
That refusal said more than a threat would have done.
Savannah stopped beside Emma’s chair and crouched, bringing herself level with her daughter.
She did not touch her immediately.
Something in Emma’s rigid shoulders told her to be gentle, to let the child decide if she could bear it.
“I’m here,” Savannah whispered.
Emma’s chin trembled.
The words worked on her like warmth on ice.
A crack appeared.
Then another.
She leaned forward by the smallest amount.
Savannah opened her arms.
That was when the stranger spoke again.
“Ask her first.”
Savannah did not look away from Emma.
“Ask her what?”
“Ask her what she was told.”
Emma’s breath caught so violently that Savannah reached for her despite herself.
Her daughter slipped off the chair, but not into Savannah’s arms.
She slid down too fast, knees hitting the rug, hands clamped over her mouth as if the truth might escape before she was allowed to say it.
The sight of it nearly brought Savannah to the floor with her.
“Emma.”
The name was all she had left.
The little girl shook her head, sobbing now in broken bursts, no longer able to hide it.
The careful crying was gone.
This was terror made small enough to fit inside a child.
Savannah reached out and this time Emma grabbed her sleeve.
Not her hand.
Her sleeve.
As if touching more than that might break some rule.
Savannah looked up at the stranger.
The woman’s face had not changed.
That steadiness was its own confession.
Whatever she wanted, she had expected Emma to break.
Perhaps she had needed it.
On the table, the folded paper waited.
So did the crayon drawing.
So did the mug gone cold.
Savannah had come home for a hug, carrying nothing more dangerous than a suitcase full of creased work clothes and a heart tired from missing her child.
Instead, she found a room arranged like a stage.
Her daughter on one side.
A stranger in her chair.
A piece of paper between them.
And a silence that seemed to know exactly what it was hiding.
Emma’s fingers tightened in Savannah’s sleeve.
Her voice came out so faintly that Savannah had to bend close to hear it.
“Mummy,” she whispered.
Savannah closed her eyes for half a second because the word hurt and healed at once.
“Yes, darling.”
Emma swallowed.
Her gaze slid towards the folded paper.
Then back to Savannah.
The stranger’s hand rested on the table, close enough to stop either of them reaching for it.
Rain traced thin lines down the glass behind them.
The whole house seemed to hold its breath.
Emma opened her mouth again.
And this time, the word she whispered made Savannah’s blood turn cold.