She Came Home From Surgery To A Frying Pan And A Voice In The Hall-heuh

I spent two days in hospital listening to the machines beside my bed and wondering whether a family could really be so silent.

Not busy.

Not confused.

Image

Silent.

There were no missed calls from my mother-in-law.

No stiff little message from my sister-in-law pretending concern.

No knock at the ward door from my father-in-law, even though he knew perfectly well where I had been taken.

For forty-eight hours, the only person from that house who rang was Leo, and he was on the other side of the world.

He was in Tokyo for work, living on airport coffee, hotel shirts, and the kind of exhaustion he called normal because he had been raised to believe providing was the same thing as being loved.

He worked seventy-hour weeks for people who smiled at him across Sunday lunch and spoke about family loyalty as if they had invented it.

Agnes, his mother, lived in the house he paid for.

Chloe, his sister, floated through it with shopping bags and complaints.

His father spent most evenings in front of the television, remote in hand, face blank whenever anything uncomfortable happened.

And I, Maya, had become the person who kept the place running while being told I was lucky to be there.

When Leo was home, they were sweetness itself.

Agnes would touch my shoulder in front of him and say, “You sit down, love, you do too much.”

Chloe would offer to help with plates, loudly enough for him to hear.

His father would grunt something that passed for thanks when I put a mug of tea by his chair.

Then Leo’s taxi would pull away at dawn, and the warmth left with the headlights.

The house changed the second he was gone.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *