“Mum… I don’t want to take a bath anymore.”
My daughter began saying it every night after I remarried, and at first I treated it like one more small battle at the end of a long day.
Children resist bedtime.

Children refuse vegetables.
Children suddenly hate the very thing they begged for last week.
That was what I told myself, because ordinary explanations are easier to hold than fear.
The first night Sophie said it, the bathroom was thick with steam and the upstairs windows had misted at the edges.
The house smelled of washing-up liquid, chicken nuggets, and the lavender bubble bath she used to love so much that I had to ration it.
Water tapped into the bath with a steady, harmless little sound.
Downstairs, plates clinked in the sink, and the electric kettle clicked off beside a mug of tea I had forgotten to drink.
Then Sophie appeared in the doorway.
She was six years old, wearing pink pyjamas with one sleeve twisted at the wrist, and she had wrapped her arms across herself so tightly that she looked smaller than she was.
She did not stamp her foot.
She did not whine.
She did not make one of those exaggerated faces children make when they are hoping to win.
She stared at the bath mat.
Not at me.
Not at the water.
At the mat, as if stepping over it would take her somewhere she could not come back from.
“You still need a bath, sweetheart,” I said.
I used the gentle voice.
The mum voice.
The voice that says everything is manageable because the adult in the room needs that to be true.
Sophie’s face changed before she started crying.
That is what stayed with me.
Not the first tear.
The change.
It was like watching a light go out behind her eyes.
One second she was my little girl, stubborn and tired and probably in need of a snack.
The next, she was somewhere I could not reach.
Before I married Jason, Sophie had adored bath time.
She made bubble beards and bubble crowns.
She arranged her plastic ducks along the edge of the tub in a serious little line, then told me which one was in charge.
She would wrap herself in a towel afterwards and walk down the stairs like royalty, demanding hot chocolate in the important voice she used when playing queens.
So when she whispered, “Please don’t make me,” I gave the moment the smallest possible meaning.
She was tired.
She was unsettled.
She was being six.
That was the first lie I told myself, and I told it because it let me sleep.
Eight months earlier, I had remarried.
Jason had come into our lives when I was so worn down by loneliness that kindness felt like rescue.
My first husband had died in a workplace accident, and grief had not arrived like a storm.
It had arrived like paperwork.
Forms.
Calls.
Bills.
School runs done with swollen eyes.
A lunchbox packed while my hands shook.
Years of moving through ordinary days as if I was already late for something I could never pay back.
Jason seemed steady.
That was the word everyone used.
Steady.
He fixed the loose front step without making a fuss.
He put petrol in the car when the tank was low.
He carried shopping bags in one hand and Sophie’s book bag in the other.
He remembered bin night.
He stood politely at the school gate and nodded to other parents without overdoing it.
With the neighbours, he was pleasant.
With me, he was careful.
With Sophie, he was patient in a way that made people tell me I was lucky.
After the wedding, when Sophie began to change, I explained it away before anyone else could ask.
New house.
New routine.
New family.
Too much change for a small child.
At the doctor’s surgery, I wrote “adjustment worries” on the intake form.
The phrase looked sensible in my handwriting.
It looked like something a tired but responsible mother would write.
At 2:13 one Tuesday morning, after Sophie woke from another nightmare, I typed “bad dreams since remarriage” into my phone notes so I would remember to mention it.
The screen lit my face in the dark while she clung to my sleeve and asked whether morning was nearly here.
When the school office rang because Sophie had cried during quiet reading, I told the secretary, “She’s still getting used to things at home.”
I could hear myself sounding calm.
Reasonable.
Grateful for the call.
I kept giving people explanations because explanations feel like walls.
You build enough of them and you can pretend nothing is getting in.
But fear does not need a door.
At first, Sophie resisted the bath once or twice a week.
Then every other night.
Then every single night.
The word itself began to do something to her.
I would say, “Bath in ten minutes,” and her shoulders would tighten before she had even turned around.
Her cheeks would drain of colour.
Her fingers would curl into her sleeves until only the tips showed.
Sometimes she backed away from me as if I had become someone unsafe by saying it.
I asked whether the water was too hot.
She shook her head.
I asked whether the soap had stung her eyes.
She shook her head.
I asked whether she wanted the bubbles without the bath toys, or the toys without the bubbles, or music playing, or the door left open.
She shook her head to all of it.
I offered to sit on the closed toilet lid and read her a story, the way I used to when she was smaller.
That made her cry harder.
There are moments in motherhood when you know you are standing beside something important, but you cannot yet see its shape.
You feel it in the silence after a question.
You feel it in the way your child looks at the floor instead of your face.
You feel it, and then life comes rushing in with washing, work emails, lunch money, damp towels, and the hundred tiny demands that train you to keep moving.
On the Thursday it all began to break open, I was not my best self.
Work had run late.
The kitchen was still a mess.
A tea towel hung half off the counter, and the washing-up bowl was full of cloudy water.
Sophie’s school note was stuck to the fridge with a weak magnet, reminding me about something I had not yet paid for.
Jason was in the sitting room with the football on low.
The sound of the match drifted through the house in little bursts of crowd noise and commentary.
It made everything feel normal.
That was the worst part.
Normal things were still happening.
The dishwasher hummed.
The hallway clock clicked.
The bath filled.
And my daughter stood in the doorway as if I had asked her to walk into danger.
“Sophie, enough,” I said.
The words came out sharper than I meant them to.
“It’s only a bath.”
The scream came immediately.
Not loud for attention.
Not theatrical.
It was a sound that seemed to tear straight through her.
Her knees hit the hallway carpet before I had time to reach for her.
The towel dropped from her hand.
One of her yellow bath ducks rolled away under the little vanity cupboard, bright and ridiculous against the grey floor.
I still remember that duck.
I remember hating it for looking cheerful.
I turned off the tap.
The sudden quiet made the house feel too small.
For one ugly heartbeat, I wanted anger.
Anger would have been simple.
Anger would have let me say she was testing me, that this was a boundary, that every parent had evenings like this.
Anger would have let me stay blind a little longer.
But Sophie was shaking too hard for me to pretend.
Her whole body trembled, not with temper but with terror.
I knelt in front of her.
My jeans pressed into the wet bath mat, and cold water soaked through at the knees.
I reached out, then stopped.
For the first time in her life, I was not sure whether my touch would comfort my own child or frighten her.
That uncertainty nearly split me in two.
“Sophie,” I whispered.
“Baby, look at me.”
She pressed her forehead into the carpet.
Her small fingers dug into the fibres until her knuckles went pale.
The hallway smelled of steam and lavender and something sourer beneath it, the smell of fear in a warm house.
Downstairs, Jason’s football carried on.
Someone on the television cheered.
The sound made me flinch.
“Sophie, talk to me,” I said.
I tried to keep my voice steady, but it broke on her name.
“Whatever it is, you can tell Mummy.”
She did not lift her head at first.
She breathed in little snatches.
Then she turned her face just enough for me to see one red, wet eye.
It fixed on me with a look no child should ever have.
A look that said she had been waiting for me to notice.
I thought of all the mornings she had refused breakfast.
All the afternoons her teacher had said she seemed tired.
All the times she had sat in the back seat gripping her school bag instead of telling me about her day.
I thought of the nightmares.
The flinches.
The way she had started changing clothes with her bedroom door locked.
I thought of the phrase I had written on that form.
Adjustment worries.
The words came back to me like a slap.
I had made her fear tidy enough to file.
“Sophie,” I said again.
“I am here now.”
Her mouth opened.
No sound came.
She looked past me towards the stairs.
The movement was so quick I almost missed it.
But I did not miss the way her whole body went rigid.
The sitting room had gone quiet.
No crowd noise.
No commentary.
No television at all.
Just the faint sound of the house settling and one floorboard shifting under weight.
I turned my head.
Jason’s shadow lay across the lower part of the hallway.
He had come to the bottom of the stairs.
He was not speaking.
He was not rushing up to help.
He was simply there, still and silent, listening.
I felt Sophie fold into herself.
She pressed both hands over her mouth as though she could physically hold the truth inside.
My heart began to pound so hard I could hear it in my ears.
“Jason,” I called, though my voice sounded far away to me.
“Stay downstairs.”
He did not answer at once.
That pause was the longest sound I have ever heard.
Then he said, “What’s going on?”
His tone was mild.
Almost bored.
That mildness chilled me more than shouting would have.
Sophie shook her head against my chest.
I put one arm around her slowly, giving her time to pull away.
She did not.
She clutched my jumper with both fists and buried her face in it.
The bathwater sat behind us, cooling now, with bubbles breaking one by one on the surface.
The yellow duck under the cupboard stared out at the hall like a witness.
I looked at the stairs again.
Jason had not moved.
“Give us a minute,” I said.
I heard the politeness in my own voice and hated it.
Even then, some trained part of me was trying not to make a scene in my own house.
Even then, I was saying please without saying please.
He gave a small laugh.
“What has she said now?”
The word now landed heavily.
As if there had been other things.
As if he knew there were things she might say.
Sophie made a sound so small it might not have counted as speech from anyone else.
But I was her mother.
I knew the shape of her smallest sounds.
I bent closer.
“What, darling?”
She shook harder.
Her lips brushed my sleeve.
I could feel each breath.
Behind me, the bathroom light buzzed faintly.
The mirror was still fogged.
A drop of water slipped from the tap into the full bath with a clean little plink.
The ordinary world kept offering ordinary sounds, and none of them could save us.
Then, from the kitchen below, there came the scrape of the back door.
My mum had a spare key.
I had forgotten she was coming by to return Sophie’s cardigan after picking it up from her own washing line.
I heard her call my name once, cheerful and tired, the way she always did when letting herself in.
Then she stopped.
She must have seen Jason at the bottom of the stairs.
She must have heard Sophie crying.
The next sound was a shopping bag slipping from her hand.
Something rolled across the lino.
An apple, maybe two.
A carton hit the floor with a wet split.
“Mum?” I called.
She appeared at the foot of the stairs behind Jason, one hand clamped over her mouth.
Her face had gone so white that for a second I thought she might faint.
She looked up at Sophie in my arms.
Then she looked at Jason.
Then, in a voice I had not heard since the day my first husband died, she whispered his name.
Not Jason’s.
My first husband’s.
Sophie heard it and began to sob all over again.
Jason turned his head slowly towards my mum.
The calmness had gone from his face.
Only for a moment.
Only a crack.
But I saw it.
My mum gripped the doorframe as milk spread across the kitchen tiles around her shoes.
“What did she say?” she asked me.
“She’s trying to tell me,” I said.
My voice no longer sounded like mine.
Jason took one step towards the stairs.
I pulled Sophie closer.
It was not a dramatic movement.
It was not brave in the way people imagine bravery.
It was small and instinctive and absolute.
A mother’s body deciding before her mind has finished forming the thought.
“Don’t come up,” I said.
The house went still.
Even my mum stopped crying.
Jason looked at me, and something passed across his face that I had never seen there before.
Not anger exactly.
Calculation.
As if he was working out which version of himself to put on next.
Sophie’s fingers tightened in my jumper.
Then she lifted one trembling hand.
She did not point at Jason.
She pointed at the bathroom door.
And finally, with her voice barely strong enough to cross the space between us, my daughter began to tell me why she never wanted to take a bath anymore…