Mum Warned Me To Stay Silent — Then The Colonel Recognised Me-heuh

My mum called me at 2:07 in the morning, which meant the family had either lost someone, lied about someone, or needed me to pretend I had not noticed the difference.

The phone buzzed against the crate beside my bed, throwing blue light across the wall of my little flat.

Rain tapped the window in thin, impatient lines.

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I answered because old habits are hard to kill, especially the ones your family trained into you.

“Grace,” Mum whispered.

She had woken me, but she still sounded as if I had caught her doing something improper.

“What’s happened?” I asked.

“Nothing has happened,” she said too quickly.

That was never true in our family.

There was always something happening, but it only became a problem when it threatened to be said aloud.

“Your brother’s fiancée’s family dinner is tomorrow,” she continued. “You may come.”

I sat up slowly, pulling the duvet around me against the cold.

“May?”

The word had already done its work.

It reminded me I had not been included naturally.

I had been considered, debated, managed, and finally permitted.

Mum let the silence stretch just long enough to prove she was still in charge of it.

“Only if you keep your mouth shut.”

There was the real invitation.

A place at the table, provided I arrived without my history, my work, or my inconvenient memory.

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