Grandfather Gave Girl A Broken Horse — Then Her Father Walked Out-heuh

The carrier bag looked wrong before Lily even opened it.

It was thin, crumpled, and tied at the handles with a red ribbon that had clearly been saved from something nicer.

Eight-year-old Lily Hartley still held it as if it might contain magic.

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That was Lily all over.

She could find hope in a cold cup of tea, in a forgotten biscuit tin, in the smallest kindness offered half-heartedly by someone who did not deserve her trust.

New Year’s Day had settled over my parents’ house with its usual performance of taste.

The tree still stood in the sitting room, though Christmas had passed, because my mother liked how it looked in photographs.

Silver ornaments, white lights, glass angels, velvet bows.

Nothing too bright.

Nothing too childish.

Everything arranged to suggest warmth without actually requiring any.

The windows shone against the pale winter afternoon, and the front path was still damp from a morning drizzle.

Inside, the heating was high, the table was polished, and the kitchen smelled faintly of roast potatoes and a kettle that had boiled twice and been ignored both times.

Lily had worn her pale blue dress.

She had chosen it herself two days earlier, standing in front of her wardrobe with the seriousness of someone preparing for inspection.

“Will Grandad like this one?” she had asked me.

“I think you look lovely,” I told her.

That had not been what she asked.

She wanted to know whether Arthur Hartley, my father, would look at her the way he looked at Bethany’s boys.

As if they were proof of something.

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