Boy’s Hidden T-Shirt Message Silences His Father’s Custody Hearing-heuh

The family court room was too cold for a place where people decided whether a child should stay with his mum.

It was not only the air, though that found every gap in my cheap blazer and settled between my shoulder blades.

It was the pale wall paint, the polished benches, the clipped voices, and the silver clock above the judge’s seat ticking as though it had heard worse and expected more.

Image

Beside me, Crew sat with his legs hanging above the floor.

He was seven, all sharp knees and careful hands, the sort of child who noticed when the milk was nearly gone and quietly poured less on his cereal.

That morning, in the cramped bathroom of our flat, I had combed his hair with one hand while the other held the sink because I was still half-asleep from the overnight shift.

The kettle had clicked off in the kitchen.

Rain tapped lightly against the window.

A damp tea towel hung over the radiator, and his school shoes sat by the door with one lace fraying near the end.

I had wiped his left trainer with wet kitchen roll until the scuff looked less obvious.

I had tucked his grey T-shirt into his jeans and tried to smooth the stretched collar with my thumb.

The little rocket on the sleeve was still bright.

That mattered to me more than I could explain.

Crew had looked at my face in the mirror and said, “You look tired, Mum.”

“I’m fine,” I had told him.

In our house, “I’m fine” often meant there was no room for anything else.

By the time we reached court, my hands were aching from gripping my folder too tightly.

I did not have a solicitor.

I did not have a proper briefcase or polished shoes or a clean confidence that made people listen before I spoke.

I had a thin folder from a discount shop, its corners bending, full of the things I thought would prove I was trying.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *