Daughter Begged Mum Not To Send Her Back—Then The Doctor Spoke-heuh

At 1:07 in the morning, the knocking on my front door was so faint I almost told myself it was the rain.

It had been drizzling for hours, that soft, miserable rain that turns the pavement silver and gets into your sleeves no matter how tightly you pull your coat around you.

I was standing in the kitchen with a cold mug of tea beside the sink, staring at the kettle as though it might tell me why I could not sleep.

Image

Then the knock came again.

Three weak taps.

A pause.

Then a scrape against the door, like a hand sliding down the paint.

My house was small, the sort of modest place with a narrow hallway, coats hanging too close to the radiator, and shoes tucked under the little table where I kept spare keys and post.

At night, every sound in it seemed larger.

I remember noticing the clock before I opened the door.

1:07 a.m.

When I pulled the door open, my daughter fell into my arms.

Not stepped in.

Not stumbled.

Fell.

Clara’s whole body collapsed against me as if she had been held upright only by terror, and now that she had reached me, even that had run out.

Her hair was wet and stuck to her cheeks.

One sleeve of her jumper was dark with blood.

Her lip had split, her cheek was swollen, and her hands were shaking so badly that the brass key she was clutching slipped from her fingers and struck the hallway tiles with a hard little sound.

For a moment, I could not make sense of her being there.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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