The Midnight Call That Exposed A Wife’s Cruellest Bargain At Home-Teptep

The call came after midnight, when ordinary sounds start to feel guilty.

James was five hundred miles away on business, standing in a hotel room that smelled faintly of carpet cleaner and stale coffee, when his phone lit up with Carolyn’s name.

Carolyn lived next door.

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She was the neighbour who took parcels in without making a performance of it, the woman who noticed loose fence panels, missed bin days, and whether a child looked cold walking home from school.

She was kind, but she was not dramatic.

That was why the sound of her voice frightened him before the words did.

“James,” she whispered, “I don’t know what to do.”

In the background, he could hear rain.

Not heavy rain.

That fine, miserable drizzle that gets into collars, darkens pavements, and makes every front garden look abandoned.

“What’s happened?” he asked.

There was a pause, and in it James felt the entire hotel room move further away from him.

“Your daughter is sitting in your drive,” Carolyn said. “Sarah. She has blood all over her. She’s alone. It’s midnight.”

At first, his mind refused to shape the sentence.

Sarah was meant to be at home.

Sarah was eight.

Sarah still slept with one hand tucked under her cheek and argued every morning that brushing her hair was worse than going to the dentist.

She should have been in bed.

She should not have been outside.

She should not have been alone.

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