Granddaughter’s 1:58 A.M. Call Exposed The Note On The Counter-heuh

At exactly 1:58 a.m., my phone rang.

Not in that ordinary way phones ring when someone has forgotten the time.

It rang like a warning.

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The bedroom was dark except for the thin blue glow of the screen on my bedside table, and outside the window the rain was tapping quietly against the glass.

I had been asleep, though not properly.

At my age, sleep is never the deep, careless thing it once was.

You wake for pipes, wind, distant engines, the groan of old floorboards, the strange little noises a house makes when it believes no one is listening.

So when the phone began to buzz, I opened my eyes at once.

For half a second, I thought about ignoring it.

Then I saw the name.

Lily.

My eight-year-old adopted granddaughter.

The sight of her name at that hour did something sharp and primitive to me.

It cut straight through the fog of sleep.

I snatched the phone up, pressed it to my ear, and said her name before she said mine.

There was no answer at first.

Only breathing.

Thin, uneven breathing.

The kind a child makes when she has tried very hard not to cry and has run out of strength.

“Lily?” I said again, already sitting up. “Love, can you hear me?”

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