Grandad Found The Basement Locked From Outside After Three Weeks-heuh

My grandson hadn’t come to visit me for three weeks, and by the twenty-second day, the excuses no longer sounded like kindness.

They sounded like fear dressed up as patience.

The house looked perfectly ordinary from the road, which made the wrongness of it harder to explain.

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A damp spring drizzle had left the pavement shining grey, and wet leaves had gathered around the front step in a brown, slippery pile.

The curtains were half drawn in the front room, not shut enough to mean nobody was home, not open enough to feel welcoming.

My late son’s old Nissan still sat on the drive.

Dust covered the bonnet so thickly that the rain had drawn pale little rivers through it.

Dylan would have hated seeing his dad’s car like that.

He used to polish the badge with the sleeve of his school jumper, even when I told him off for getting muck on himself.

I stood by the gate for a moment with the spare key in my pocket and told myself there was probably a simple explanation.

People tell themselves that when their heart already knows better.

The house did not smell right even before I opened the door.

It was faint at first, caught somewhere around the letterbox and the damp wood of the frame.

Not rubbish exactly.

Not drains.

Something sour, stale, and shut away.

For three weeks, I had been told my grandson was busy.

Busy revising.

Busy sleeping.

Busy seeing friends.

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