My Sister Shaved My 8-Year-Old’s Head Over A School Play-heuh

The phone began vibrating on the conference table just as I reached the slide with the revenue projections.

It was a small sound, almost polite, a soft rattle against polished wood beneath the hum of the projector.

In any other moment, I would have ignored it.

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That morning, I could not.

Fifteen board members sat around the table, all suits, folded hands, and unreadable expressions.

I had spent a month preparing for that presentation.

I had practised the figures until I could say them half asleep, with a tea towel over one shoulder and Emma calling from the kitchen table to ask whether “quarterly growth” meant we were growing plants.

It was the sort of meeting where one stumble could follow you for years.

So when my mobile buzzed the first time, I left it face down beside my laptop and carried on speaking.

“As you can see,” I said, pointing towards the screen, “if we continue this trajectory into Q3—”

The phone vibrated again.

Longer.

More insistent.

I looked down only to silence it, annoyed with myself for being annoyed, and saw the caller ID.

WESTFIELD PRIMARY SCHOOL.

Everything in the room sharpened.

The glass jug of water near my hand.

The neat stack of printed agendas.

The red dot of the laser pointer still shaking slightly against the screen.

At the same time, the people around the table seemed to move very far away.

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