Stepmother Had Us Removed From Dad’s Gala, Then £60,000 Vanished-Teptep

The foyer was all lilies, polished marble, and money pretending it had manners.

Outside the ballroom, rain ticked softly against the glass doors, and a string quartet played something delicate enough to make cruelty seem tasteful.

My daughter Lily held my hand with both of hers.

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She was seven, wearing a navy dress with tiny white stars sewn across the skirt, and the silver ballet flats she had chosen herself.

That morning, she had stood in front of my bedroom mirror and spun until she nearly fell into the laundry basket.

‘Do you think Grandpa will say I look like a princess?’ she had asked.

I had smiled and said yes.

I had told her he would love it.

I had told her the gentle things mothers say when they are trying to protect a child from the sharper edges of adults.

We were ten minutes late because one of those silver shoes had gone missing behind a stack of loo roll in the hall cupboard.

Lily had cried because princesses, apparently, did not wear trainers.

I searched under the sofa, beside the washing basket, behind the coats, and next to the quiet kettle before I finally found it.

Looking back, I should have taken that missing shoe as a warning from the universe.

I did not.

Dad’s retirement gala had been circled on my kitchen calendar for months.

Forty-two years at his engineering firm.

Partner since 2001.

A ballroom, speeches, champagne, engraved gifts, white tablecloths, gold napkins, and a room full of people who knew exactly how to smile without meaning it.

I had replied yes as soon as the invitation arrived.

I had posted a handwritten card as well, because my mum had raised me to do things properly even when people did not deserve it.

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