I came home smiling because guilt has a way of disguising itself as a nice little visit.
I had bought grapes because Mum always said they were refreshing, sourdough because Dad liked to pretend he was too practical for anything fancy, and the expensive butter he claimed tasted exactly like the cheap sort while quietly scraping half of it across his toast.
The bag sat on the passenger seat beside me, folded at the top, ordinary and harmless.

That is what I remember most clearly about that evening.
How ordinary everything looked before my life split in two.
A week earlier, Mum had stood in her kitchen and pressed a warm container of chicken soup into my hands.
The kettle had just clicked off, leaving steam on the window and a faint heat in the room.
I told her I did not need feeding.
She told me not to argue.
Dad stood on the front step behind her in his faded cap, one shoulder against the door frame, waving as though I were leaving the country instead of driving home.
I laughed because it was sweet, and because I was in a hurry.
I kissed Mum’s cheek, called goodbye to Dad, and promised I would come back at the weekend.
Promises can feel solid when you make them.
They can feel like paper when you remember them too late.
Work ran over on Friday, then again on Saturday.
Michael picked up extra shifts and came home exhausted, with that grey look people get when they are trying to be useful and worn out at the same time.
Then I caught a miserable cold and spent two days wrapped in a blanket, answering messages with one thumb and telling myself I would visit when I sounded less like a blocked drain.
One missed weekend became several missed chances.
I rang sometimes.
I sent quick messages.
I told myself that counted.
Mum never complained.
Dad never made me feel bad.
That somehow made it worse, because kind parents have a way of letting you hurt yourself with your own conscience.
On Tuesday afternoon, Kara texted me while I was at work.
Could you go by Mum and Dad’s and grab the post? We’re away for a few days. Basement door still sticks.
I read it twice.
There was nothing dramatic about it.
No warning.
No strange punctuation.
No sense that I was being pulled towards the worst room I would ever walk into.
Just a small favour, handed to the daughter who had been too busy to visit.
I said yes immediately.
For the rest of the afternoon, guilt sat beside me like another person.
I kept picturing Mum’s face when I turned up with shopping, the way she would say I had not needed to bring anything, then take the bag and start putting things away in the wrong cupboards because she preferred helping to being thanked.
I pictured Dad pretending not to be pleased about the butter.
I pictured tea being made before I had taken my coat off.
By the time I left work, rain had started to gather in the air.
Not proper rain at first, just that fine dampness that seems to come sideways and settle on your hair, your sleeves, your mood.
I stopped at the shop anyway.
Grapes, bread, butter.
A small peace offering.
A stupid one, maybe, but it was all I had in my hands.
Their street was quiet when I turned in.
The houses sat close together, curtains drawn, television light flickering behind some windows.
There was a red post box at the corner, slick with drizzle, and the pavement shone under the street lamps.
Everything looked the way it always had.
That was the first cruelty.
There should have been some sign.
A door hanging open.
A neighbour outside looking worried.
A window smashed.
Something to tell me I was about to stop being the person I had been.
Instead, the house looked as ordinary as a house can look.
The car was in the drive.
The bins were tucked by the side gate.
Mum’s little pot of herbs sat on the front step, limp from the cold.
But the stillness was wrong.
I knew it before I put the handbrake on.
Usually, their sitting room lamp was on by then, and the television mumbled through the wall.
Usually, if Mum saw my car, she called out before I reached the door.
Use your key, love.
That little phrase had followed me through my whole adult life.
That evening, there was nothing.
I picked up the shopping bag and walked to the front door.
The bell sounded too loud inside.
I waited.
No footsteps.
No chair scraping.
No Dad calling that he was coming, then taking another full minute to appear because he had stopped to check something unnecessary.
I rang again.
Still nothing.
I knocked, first lightly, then harder.
“Mum? Dad? It’s me.”
The words came out embarrassed, as if I were making a fuss.
That is another thing I remember with a kind of rage.
Even then, part of me wanted to be polite to the silence.
I found my key with fingers that had gone clumsy.
The lock turned.
The door opened on stale, heavy air.
At first, my brain tried to offer ordinary explanations.
Maybe they had gone to the back garden.
Maybe Dad had the television on mute.
Maybe Mum was upstairs and had not heard.
The hallway was dim, with coats on the hooks and Dad’s old shoes placed neatly by the mat.
There was a faint smell of something cooked, gone cold.
The sitting room lamp was on.
Its yellow light made a small circle on the carpet and left the corners dull.
I saw the mugs before I saw them.
Two mugs on the coffee table.
One with a tea stain down the side.
A spoon on the carpet.
Dad’s pill organiser open near the edge of the table, its little plastic lids flipped back.
A folded receipt lay by the sofa, crisp and pale against the dark fabric.
Then the shape beside the coffee table became my mother.
The shape by the couch became my father.
For a few seconds, I did not move.
My mind rejected the room as if it were a photograph from someone else’s life.
The shopping bag slipped from my hand.
Grapes rolled across the carpet and under the table.
That sound, tiny and ridiculous, broke me open.
“Mum?”
I was on the floor before I realised I had crossed the room.
Her cheek was cold.
Not dead cold.
Cold enough to make every part of me panic.
Her eyelashes fluttered, or I imagined they did.
I pressed my hand near her mouth and felt the faintest breath.
Then I turned to Dad.
His glasses were crooked, one lens smudged, his face slack in a way I had never seen.
I found a pulse at his neck.
Weak.
So weak I thought I might have invented it because I needed it to be there.
I rang 999 with hands that did not feel connected to my body.
The dispatcher asked questions.
I answered badly.
Two adults.
Unconscious.
Breathing, barely.
No, I did not know what had happened.
No, I had not moved them except to check they were alive.
Yes, the door had been locked.
Yes, I was alone.
At some point the dispatcher told me I was doing well.
I hated that.
I was not doing well.
I was kneeling between my parents on a carpet scattered with grapes, trying not to touch anything because something in the room felt arranged rather than accidental.
Two mugs.
A spoon.
An open pill organiser.
A receipt.
Those objects stared back at me like witnesses.
The paramedics came fast, though it felt like hours.
The hallway filled with wet coats, black bags, equipment, urgent voices, and the smell of rain carried in on uniforms.
I stood where they told me to stand.
I answered what I could.
No, I did not know if they had eaten recently.
Yes, Mum made soup often.
Yes, Dad took tablets, but carefully.
No, they were not the sort to forget the gas.
No, there had been no call, no warning, no argument that I knew of.
A police officer arrived while the paramedics were still working.
He spoke gently, which frightened me more than if he had been brisk.
He asked who had keys.
I said me, Kara, Mum and Dad, and Michael for emergencies.
He asked if anyone else had been visiting.
I said neighbours sometimes popped in.
He asked if anything seemed out of place.
I looked around the sitting room and realised the answer was both everything and nothing.
My parents were ordinary people in an ordinary room.
That was what made the whole thing obscene.
At the hospital, the corridor felt too bright.
There are some places where time does not pass normally, and hospital corridors are among them.
You can watch a clock and still feel trapped inside the same minute.
Michael arrived soaked from the rain, his work shirt sticking to his shoulders.
He had come straight from his shift.
His face changed when he saw mine.
He did not ask first.
He just put his arms around me and held me, solid and shaking, while I pressed my forehead into his damp shirt.
Kara rang again and again.
When I finally answered, I could barely speak.
She sobbed so hard I could not understand her.
I kept saying they were alive because that was the only fact I had, and I clung to it like a railing on a steep staircase.
At 9:37 p.m., the doctor came out.
I remember the time because I had been staring at the clock as if watching it closely might force mercy out of the world.
The doctor said my parents were alive.
For one second, air came back into the building.
Then his expression changed.
He explained that tests had found a harmful substance in their system.
He did not say all the worst words at once.
Doctors have a professional way of building a wall around horror, brick by careful brick.
But I understood.
This was not a fall.
Not a gas leak.
Not a sudden medical episode that had taken them both at once.
Something dangerous had been mixed into something they consumed.
Their food, most likely.
My knees softened.
Michael tightened his arm around me.
Kara was still on the phone, and I heard the exact moment she understood because her crying stopped.
Silence can be louder than grief.
The police opened an investigation.
That phrase sounds neat when people say it on television.
In real life, it means your parents’ house becomes a place other people enter with gloves.
It means questions repeat until your answers feel thin.
It means every ordinary object becomes suspicious.
Mugs.
Receipts.
Tablets.
Soup containers.
A spoon on the floor.
A piece of post on the mat.
It means you stand in a hospital corridor with a paper cup of tea going cold in your hand and wonder who you know badly enough to have missed evil.
Mum and Dad were not rich.
They did not have enemies.
They lived quietly.
Mum remembered birthdays and hospital appointments and which neighbour liked plain biscuits rather than chocolate ones.
Dad pretended to be gruff about sentimental films, then wiped his eyes and blamed dust.
They argued about bins and weather and whether the heating needed to go on.
They were not saints.
They were better than that.
They were human and kind.
That made the question worse.
Who would want to hurt people like that?
Kara kept saying it made no sense.
She said it so many times that the words became almost useless.
It makes no sense.
It makes no sense.
It makes no sense.
But somewhere underneath my shock, another thought had started moving.
Things do not have to make sense to everyone.
They only have to make sense to the person who does them.
For the next week, we lived in fragments.
Hospital visits.
Police updates that were not really updates.
Work emails I could not answer properly.
Neighbours leaving messages.
Food people brought that none of us wanted.
Mum’s condition shifted by tiny degrees.
Dad’s too.
Alive became a word I feared and worshipped.
Every time my phone rang, my whole body went cold.
Michael tried to hold our home together.
He made tea I did not drink.
He washed mugs I had left in rooms.
He put blankets over me when I fell asleep sitting up.
He was quiet, but not distant.
That is what I trusted about him.
He never tried to fill silence with brave speeches.
He simply stayed.
One week after I found them, he went back to my parents’ house.
An officer was meeting him there, and the plan was simple.
Collect the post.
Find Mum’s charger.
Pick up Dad’s spare glasses.
Bring back anything they might need if they woke properly, if the doctors allowed more time, if the world decided to be kind.
I could not face the house yet.
I told myself I was being practical by letting him go.
The truth was that the thought of stepping into that sitting room again made my throat close.
The morning he went, the rain had returned.
Not heavy, just steady, tapping at the window and making everything look tired.
I sat at our kitchen table and watched the kettle boil.
I remember thinking that grief makes you notice the stupidest details.
Limescale at the bottom of a cup.
A tea towel folded wrong.
The way a Type G plug sits square and blunt in the socket.
Domestic life carries on with insulting confidence.
Michael was gone longer than I expected.
When the front door opened, I knew something had happened before he said my name.
He came in slowly.
His jacket was dark with rain.
His face had gone the colour of paper.
In one hand, he held Mum’s charger and Dad’s glasses case.
In the other, pinched between two fingers, was something tiny.
A memory card.
I stared at it without understanding.
Then he said, “The old doorbell camera.”
The words seemed to arrive from a long way off.
Dad had bought it two years earlier after a parcel went missing.
For a month he had behaved as though he were running private security from the hallway, checking motion alerts and complaining about foxes setting it off.
Then it stopped connecting properly.
Or he said it did.
He grumbled about it, called it a waste of money, and left the little camera above the door like a dead insect.
We had all assumed it was useless.
Apparently, it had still been recording.
Michael placed the memory card on the kitchen table as though it might burn him.
The kettle clicked off behind us.
Neither of us moved.
I thought of the porch.
The herbs on the step.
The locked door.
The stillness before I opened it.
I thought of the doctor saying harmful substance, his voice careful and contained.
I thought of my mother’s cheek under my hand.
I thought of my father’s pulse fading beneath my fingers.
Michael said the officer had nearly missed it.
The camera casing was dusty.
The small card was still inside.
The battery system had failed, or the connection had failed, or some other part of the thing had given up, but not the part that mattered.
Not the part that watched the door.
“Emily,” Michael said.
My name in his mouth sounded like a warning.
I sat down because I did not trust my legs.
He fetched the little adapter from a drawer where we kept old cables, receipts, batteries, and things nobody ever needed until suddenly they did.
His hands were shaking.
That scared me more than the memory card.
Michael was not a man who shook easily.
He was tired, yes.
Quiet, often.
But steady.
In the worst moments of that week, I had borrowed steadiness from him because mine had vanished.
Now his was gone too.
He slid the card into the reader.
The laptop made a small, ordinary sound.
A folder appeared.
Several files sat inside, labelled only by dates and times.
The night before.
The morning of.
Older ones too.
Rain tapped at our kitchen window.
I could hear it because neither of us was breathing properly.
Michael moved the cursor to the file from the night before I found them.
He looked at me once.
I wanted to tell him not to press play.
I wanted to go back to the moment before I knew there was proof.
That is a strange thing to admit.
All week I had wanted answers.
But when the answer was sitting in front of me, small enough to fit under a fingernail, I wanted ignorance again.
Ignorance had been terrible.
Knowledge looked worse.
Before he clicked, my mind began running through names.
Neighbours.
Relatives.
Delivery drivers.
Old friends.
People who had keys.
People who did not.
People who loved my parents.
People who knew exactly how to pretend they did.
The last thought landed heavily.
Because harm like that does not always come from strangers.
Sometimes it knocks softly.
Sometimes it brings food.
Sometimes it uses a voice your parents trust.
Michael’s finger hovered over the trackpad.
He whispered my name again.
I looked from the tiny card to his face.
Whatever he had seen or guessed at the house had frightened him beyond shock.
Before the video played, before the porch light flickered on, before the figure stepped into frame, I understood that this was no longer only about my parents surviving.
It was about the shape of my whole family.
It was about every key we had handed out.
Every visit we had not questioned.
Every polite smile at a kitchen table.
Every person who had ever said love you and meant something else entirely.
Michael pressed play.
The screen filled with my parents’ front step, slick with rain, the little herb pot trembling in the wind.
For two seconds, there was nothing.
Then a shadow moved across the porch.
A hand lifted towards the door.
And as the figure turned, just enough for the camera to catch the edge of their face, Michael stopped the video so suddenly the sound cut out.
He looked at me.
I looked at him.
And before either of us said the name, I knew our family was about to shatter in a way no apology would ever repair.