Eight-Year-Old’s Hair Was Cut Because It “Wasn’t Fair”-heuh

My daughter came home from her auntie’s house wearing a pink bucket hat, and I knew something was wrong before she said a word.

Lily was eight years old, all knees and questions and stubborn little bursts of joy that could fill a whole room before she had even taken her coat off.

Usually, after an afternoon with her cousins, she came through the door talking before I could ask how it had gone.

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She would tell me who had won the game, who had sulked, who had eaten the last biscuit, and what tiny injustice needed solving before bedtime.

That evening, she said nothing.

The rain had started again, tapping lightly against the kitchen window and leaving dark marks on the front step.

I had just made tea, and the kettle had clicked itself quiet.

A mug sat on the side, steaming, untouched.

Lily stood in the narrow hallway with a neon-pink bucket hat pulled low on her head.

It was the sort of hat a child wears for a joke, bright and cheap and too cheerful for the face beneath it.

She held the brim with both hands.

Her fingers were pressed so tightly into the fabric that her knuckles had gone white.

“Hello, love,” I said.

She did not answer.

She looked down at the doormat instead.

There was mud at the edge of one trainer and a little dark smear near the cuff of her cardigan.

I noticed it in the detached way you notice something ordinary just before the world stops being ordinary at all.

“Nice hat,” I said, trying to keep my voice light.

Lily’s shoulders lifted towards her ears.

That was the first thing that made my stomach drop.

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