My Daughter Saw My Mother-In-Law Walking — Then Ethan Went White-Teptep

At the shopping centre, my 11-year-old clutched my hand and said, “Mum — quickly, behind that pillar!” She murmured, “Don’t move.” I stole a glance — and froze in horror because my mother-in-law was … wait … what? I stayed silent. I took action. The next morning, they went pale.

Lily’s fingers closed round mine before I knew there was danger.

Not the casual squeeze of a child wanting attention.

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Not the impatient tug towards a shop window or a snack counter.

This was fear.

Her hand crushed mine with such sudden force that I turned at once.

“Mum,” she whispered, dragging me sideways. “Quickly. Behind that pillar. Don’t move.”

My shoulder knocked against the cold fake marble edge near the rotunda, and a woman with three shopping bags gave us a look before joining the queue outside a jewellery shop.

Black Friday had made the whole place feel feverish.

There were damp coats steaming under the lights, perfume hanging too sweetly in the air, paper bags knocking against legs, children asking for things they had already been told they could not have.

Someone had dropped chips near the escalator.

A security guard was trying to direct a queue without raising his voice.

Christmas lights blinked overhead in clean, cheerful rows, as if nothing serious could happen beneath them.

But Lily was not looking at the lights.

She was staring past me.

Her face had gone empty in the way children’s faces do when they have seen something that does not fit inside their world.

I bent my head nearer to hers.

“What is it?”

She shook her head once.

“Look,” she breathed.

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