They Rejected My Daughter—Then The £700 Payments Exposed Them-Teptep

By the time my father told me my child meant nothing to him, Lily still had glitter caught in her hair.

It was the cheap kind from a birthday tiara, the sort that clings to your fingertips and turns up later on sofa cushions, school jumpers, and the rim of a tea mug.

She had worn it all afternoon with the solemn pride only a six-year-old can manage.

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Every time the front path made a sound, she sat straighter.

Every time a car slowed outside, she looked towards the window.

By four o’clock, she had stopped asking whether Nana and Grandad were nearly here.

By five, she had started pretending she had never expected them at all.

That was worse.

A child can shout and stamp and recover from it.

A child going quiet is something that stays in a room long after everyone else has left.

The house smelled of sugar icing, damp coats, and the faint burnt edge from sausage rolls I had left in the oven too long because I was checking my phone.

Pink balloons were tied to chair backs.

One had escaped and lodged itself against the ceiling light.

The cake sat in the centre of the table with one slice missing and another cut too wide, because Lily had wanted to save a big piece for Grandad.

Six candles leaned in the icing, uneven and stubborn.

She had pushed every one in herself.

“They might be lost,” she said after the last little friend had gone home with a party bag.

I smiled the way parents smile when they are trying not to break in front of their children.

“Maybe,” I said.

I had rung my parents ten times by then.

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