He Found His Wife Collapsed While Mum Served Sunday Dinner-heuh

The baby’s scream reached Arthur before the key finished turning in the lock.

It came thin and ragged through the little terraced house, through the narrow hall and past the row of damp coats on the hooks, so sharp that for one dreadful second he could not move at all.

Then the smell hit him.

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Roast chicken.

Garlic.

Potatoes.

Something burnt underneath it all, bitter and black at the bottom of a pan.

He dropped his overnight bag on the mat and ran towards the kitchen.

Arthur had been away for exactly forty-eight hours, the first time he had left Elena since she gave birth.

He had hated going.

The work trip had been booked months earlier, before Leo arrived, before sleepless nights and tiny socks drying on radiators, before Arthur understood how small a newborn could look against his own chest.

Elena had told him to go.

She had smiled through tired eyes and said it was only two days.

His mother, Margaret, had stood beside the kettle at the time and said she would stay in the spare room.

‘I’ll take the burden off her,’ she had said.

It sounded kind.

That was always the trick with Margaret.

She knew how to make control sound like help, how to make criticism sound like concern, and how to make anyone who objected look ungrateful.

Arthur had grown up inside that voice.

He knew its corners.

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