Boy Refused To Sit, Then A Nurse Asked One Quiet Question-heuh

My ten-year-old son arrived at my door trembling and refused to sit down, and for one terrible moment I thought the world had narrowed to the space between his trainers and my doormat.

The evening outside my block of flats had turned the colour of old tin, rain shining across the car park and collecting in the shallow dips of the pavement.

I had just come in from another long shift, hands still rough with dust and cold, my work boots kicked beside the mat, the kettle boiling because that was what I did when I did not know what else to do.

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Three taps came at the door.

They were so soft that I nearly ignored them.

The pipes in the wall often knocked when the flat upstairs ran hot water, and at first I told myself it was that.

Then the taps came again.

Slow, uncertain, almost apologetic.

I opened the door with a tea towel still over one shoulder, expecting a neighbour, a parcel, some small ordinary inconvenience.

Instead, Mason stood in the hallway.

His backpack hung crookedly from one shoulder, heavy enough to pull his hoodie out of shape.

One shoelace lay loose across the wet concrete outside my door.

His face was pale in a way that made him look younger than ten, and his breath came in thin little pulls through parted lips.

For a few seconds, I did not speak.

My brain was still searching for the normal version of this scene.

Mason was meant to come at seven.

Vanessa always texted before drop-off.

Always.

Sometimes it was about traffic.

Sometimes it was about homework.

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