Five-Year-Old Hides From Her Aunt, Then A Small Clue Exposes Everything-heuh

The first thing missing from the party was not cake, or music, or laughter.

It was my daughter’s small hand in mine.

At my parents’ house, the back garden had been dressed up for my niece’s sixth birthday with balloons tied along the fence, paper plates stacked by the patio doors, and a pink cake waiting beneath a plastic cover.

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Children ran between the bouncy castle and the garden table, their voices rising above the scrape of chairs and the soft hiss of drizzle drying on the paving stones.

Inside, the kettle kept clicking on and off.

My mother moved between the kitchen and the garden carrying mugs, wiping counters, smiling too brightly whenever anyone asked whether she needed help.

My father stood near the patio doors with that proud, watchful expression he wore at family gatherings, as if keeping everyone cheerful was a job he had already assigned himself.

My aunt had taken charge of the children.

She always did.

She was the kind of woman who corrected manners before she asked feelings, who could make the word please sound like a warning, and who believed children should be grateful for whatever adults decided was best for them.

Most of the family called that firm.

I had always called it exhausting.

Millie called it frightening, though she had never said that out loud.

She was five years old, small for her age, with a serious little face and a habit of standing close enough to touch my sleeve whenever rooms became too full.

Since Hannah died, she had moved through the world more carefully.

Her mother had been the loud one between us, the warm one, the one who could turn a shop queue into a conversation and a rainy afternoon into an adventure.

After the funeral, Millie stopped running into rooms.

She began listening first.

She began asking before she took a biscuit, before she sat down, before she spoke to people she had known her whole life.

Grief had not made her difficult.

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