She Hid A Recorder In Her Necklace Before Her Parents Turned On Her-heuh

My bl00d reached the floor before I fully understood that I had stopped begging.

It landed in little dark marks across the pale kitchen tiles, the same tiles my mother used to polish every Friday until the room smelt of bleach and lemon cleaner.

The kettle had boiled and gone quiet on the worktop.

Image

Two mugs of tea sat untouched beside the sink, one with a spoon still standing in it, as if ordinary life had been interrupted in the middle of pretending to be safe.

Rain ticked against the back window.

My mother stood three feet away from me with her hand still raised.

Her face was not the face she wore at the school gate or in the queue at the chemist.

There was no soft voice, no tight smile, no “we only worry because we love you”.

There was only fury.

“Ungrateful,” she said, sharp enough to cut through the small kitchen. “After everything we did for you.”

I had heard that sentence in every possible form since I was a child.

It came when I said no.

It came when I cried.

It came when I asked for privacy, for space, for money that was mine, for a weekend with my daughter that did not include them.

After everything we did for you.

It meant behave.

It meant obey.

It meant remember who owns the story.

My father stood near the narrow hallway, blocking the only easy way out.

His shoulders filled the doorway, and his jaw had that familiar tightness that used to make me go quiet before I had even been told to.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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