Thrown Out With Six Children, She Revealed The Deed In The Rain-Teptep

The rain had already turned the front path slick when Thomas Whitmore opened the door and looked at me as though I had arrived begging rather than standing in the house I had kept alive for years.

Sophie was heavy against my chest, feverish and damp, her cheek pressed to my jumper while the rain found every seam in my coat.

Behind me, my six children stood in a broken row, clutching carrier bags, school satchels, and the few belongings they had been allowed to grab before their grandparents decided grief was an opportunity.

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Thomas pointed towards the gate.

“Take your six children and go away,” he said. “This house belongs to the real family.”

The words landed harder than the rain.

For a moment I could only stare at the warm hall behind him.

There were still small shoes by the radiator.

A tea towel hung over the banister because one of the twins had used it to wipe up spilled milk that morning.

Richard’s old scarf was on the peg near the door, the one he used to wear when the mornings were grey and cold and he had to leave before the children woke.

It was all there, ordinary and intimate and still ours.

Yet Thomas stood in the doorway like a landlord removing strangers.

Eleanor appeared behind him in her pale cardigan, dry and composed, her mouth set in that careful line she used whenever she wanted cruelty to look like common sense.

“Richard is gone,” she said.

Nobody needed reminding.

His absence was already in every corner of the house.

It was in the chair no one sat in.

It was in the untouched mug at the back of the cupboard.

It was in the way the children stopped themselves from calling out for him when they came home.

But Eleanor said it as though his death had settled a bill in her favour.

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