Dad Asked About My £2,000 Allowance, Then Mum Went White-heuh

At family dinner, my dad asked whether the £2,000 he sent every month was still enough for me.

I said, “What allowance?”

That was the moment my mother’s face went white.

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Not pale in the pretty, dramatic way people describe in films.

White like the colour had been wiped from her skin by a damp cloth.

The dining room smelt of roast chicken, lemon polish, and candle wax.

Mum had cleaned the table until it shone, because she always polished things when she wanted us to look like a proper family.

The rain had been tapping at the front window all evening, soft and steady, the kind of rain that made coats smell damp in the hallway.

The kettle had clicked off in the kitchen and nobody had poured tea.

That should have told me something.

In our house, tea was what happened when people did not know what else to do.

Tea after bad news.

Tea after arguments.

Tea after someone cried upstairs and came down pretending they had hay fever.

But that night, the kettle stayed untouched.

Dad sat at the head of the table, quieter than usual.

Mum sat opposite me in her cream jumper and diamond studs, her hair neat, her mouth wearing the kind of smile she used in public.

Olivia, my sister, had arrived with a wool coat, a small suitcase, and boots that looked too expensive to be left by the door.

She always looked finished.

That was the word I used for her in my head.

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