Mrs Whitmore’s Final Recording Exposed The Children Who Abandoned Her-heuh

Mrs Margaret Whitmore died wearing lipstick for children who had stopped coming.

Not a smudge of it, either.

It was the same red she wore every Sunday, touched carefully to lips that had grown thinner with age, pressed once to a tissue, then checked in the little hand mirror she kept beside her bed.

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“Too much?” she would ask.

“Just enough,” I would tell her.

She always smiled at that.

It was a small smile, the kind that tried not to ask for anything.

On the last night of her life, rain tapped against the care home windows and ran in thin silver lines down the glass.

The corridor outside Room 8 smelt faintly of furniture polish, boiled vegetables, and the lavender spray someone used far too generously after evening rounds.

Mrs Whitmore sat upright in bed as if she were waiting to be collected for a family dinner.

She had chosen her navy dress.

She had insisted on black shoes.

Her fake pearls were fastened at the back by hands that had trembled so badly I had wanted to do it for her, though she shook her head and said, “No, sweetheart, a lady must make an effort.”

Her white hair was braided over one shoulder.

The bedside lamp glowed warmly against her face.

Beyond that little pool of light, the room was shadowed and still.

“Don’t turn off the light,” she whispered when I reached towards the switch.

I stopped.

“My children are coming tonight.”

The words were not confused.

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