Granddaughter’s Whisper Made The Doctor Close The Surgery Door-heuh

I had only meant to drop off a birthday present.

That was all.

A quick drive through a grey October morning, a knock at my son’s front door, a kiss on my granddaughter’s head, and a parcel left safely in her small hands before I went home and made myself a cup of tea.

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Lily was turning eight that weekend, and I had wrapped the gift myself.

Badly, I admit.

My late wife used to make wrapping look like an act of love.

She would smooth the paper with her palms, fold the corners neatly, curl the ribbon with the edge of the scissors, and somehow make a modest present from a little shop feel like something from a window display.

I used too much tape.

The ribbon would not sit flat.

One corner was bulky enough to look suspicious.

Still, I had sat at my kitchen table the night before with the kettle clicking off behind me, and I had done it because some rituals are too precious to surrender.

My wife had been gone four years by then.

Cancer took her quickly, with no time for any of us to learn how to live without her first.

After she died, I found that grief did not always arrive as crying.

Sometimes it arrived as an empty chair.

Sometimes it was a second mug I nearly reached for.

Sometimes it was the sight of a child’s birthday card and the knowledge that the person who would have chosen the perfect words was no longer there to write them.

So I wrote the card myself.

I drew three little stars beside Lily’s name because she loved stars.

Then I drove to Mark’s house with the present buckled into the passenger seat, as if the parcel was a passenger who deserved protecting.

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