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Chilling Discovery by Pure Chance: My Four-Year-Old Sister Lucy Developed an Umbilical Hernia—Doctors Warned Us Not to Delay. The Sooner the Surgery, the Better. Lucy Refused to Go to the Hospital Without Dad. We Waited for Him to Return from His Shift, and He Walked Her All the Way to the Operating Room.

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A dreadful discovery came about by sheer chance. My little four-year-old sister, Lucy, had developed an umbilical hernia. The doctors insisted it mustnt be delayedthe sooner the operation, the better. Lucy refused point-blank to go to the hospital without Dad. We waited for him to return from his lorry route, and he walked her all the way to the operating room.

“Daddy, will you wait for me here?” my sister sobbed.

“Where else would I go, love? Of course Ill wait. Why are you crying? Youre my brave little girl, arent you?”

“Im not crying, Im just breathing hard!”

And off she went. A simple, routine procedure. Yet the doctors asked our parents to donate blood to the blood bankit was mandatory.

“But only one of us would match, surely,” Dad said. “Couldnt you run tests first? So we dont give more than needed.”

“Theres no such thing as too much blood,” the doctor replied firmly.

Mum and Dad both gave blood. Mum looked pale, as if she might faint any moment. Afterwards, she couldnt sit still, pacing to the treatment room, chatting with the nurse. When Lucy was wheeled out, Dad went to meet her, just as hed promised. He stayed with her all weekend. Mum, a little calmer, visited briefly before taking me home, though I protested.

“I could stay with her too,” I insisted stubbornly.

I was eleven by then. Lucy, my little fair-haired sister, was the person I loved most in the worldperhaps even more than Mum and Dad. How could anyone not love her? An angel. A fair-haired angel in the flesh.

Imagine a small market town with its modest hospital. Yes, newly built, fully equippedeven had a blood bank, fancy that. But a town is just a town. Three days later, Lucy was home, and Dad prepared for another route. He went out to buy cigarettes for the road. When he returned he looked like a storm cloud.

“Daddy!” Lucy wailed from the nursery (she was still on bed rest). “Did you bring my marshmallows?”

Dad left the shopping bag in the hall. He told me sharply to go to the nursery. Then he took Mum by the elbow and steered her into the kitchen.

“John John, whats wrong?”

What followed was a conversation I only understood years laterback then, Lucy and I were clueless. She was too young, and I obeyed Dad without question. Nursery it was. Lucy whimpered for Daddy and sweets, so I offered to read to her. Thank God, she agreed.

In the kitchen, John, eyes wild, cornered Jane so close she pressed against the wall. Nowhere left to retreat.

“Is it true? That Lucy isnt mine?”

“WhathowJohn, have you lost your mind? How can you say such a thing?”

“Ill tell you what Im saying. My bloods A positive, yours is O positive. Hers” he jerked his head toward the door, “is B negative. If theres been a mistake, we can test again.”

Jane shoved past him, slumped at the table, and dropped her head into her hands with a groan.

“Those bastards. I begged them! What do they want? Jealous of us, John. We had everything. Such lovely children.”

“You begged them, did you? Right. Crystal clear.”

He left the kitchen, leaving Jane in tears. Just one stumble out of boredom with that visiting engineer. Her husband always away, always on the road. In films, lorry drivers are romantic. In real lifecold and lonely. Jane had thought she deserved some warmth. Surely he wasnt faithful either, out there for weeks. She jumped up to chase after him, but he was already gone. Only a box of marshmallows remained on the table.

After his next route, Dad had a serious talk with me. Asked if Id go with him.

“Dad, but what about Lucy? Mum? Cant you stay?”

A boulder settled on my shoulders. Id watched videos about rockshow theyre made of layers. The weight crushing me wasnt uniform either: fear of losing Dad, fear of choosing. Either way, Id lose someone. Doing the maths in my head, I chose to stay. Lucy + Mum outnumbered Dad. Though Lucy alone mightve tipped the scales.

Dad met me often after that. He acted as if Lucy didnt exist. I didnt understand, but I knewif he could explain, he would have. At first, Lucy moped and cried, a heartbreaking sight. Then she asked about Dad less and less. She withdrew, lost in her toys. I didnt grasp why this punishment had fallen on her, but I guessed. As for Mum

Mum lost her mind. She started dragging rubbish from the bins into the house. First harmless things, almost useful. Then anything. She stopped caring for us entirely, muttering over her hoarded treasures. How a young, beautiful woman could turn into that in a year and a halfI couldnt fathom. But I said nothing to Dad. A neighbour, Mrs. Mary, looked after us, sometimes. Dads child support covered food, barely. The stench clinging to our flat, though schoolmates mocked me, but I avoided fights.

“Mrs. Mary, can you teach me to iron?” I knocked on her door.

“Tom, love, youd need to wash them first” she wrinkled her nose.

“Pointless. I did. But Im seeing Dad tomorrow, and I cant look like this”

“So he doesnt” she gasped. “Know about Jane?”

“I wont tell him. He left. Its not his business anymore!”

She let me in, then reconsidered. “Bring Lucy too. Ill tidy you both. And bring your clotheschange here. Whatever I can do”

So we did. At least I no longer reeked like a tramp at school. But kind Mrs. Mary didnt stop there. She hunted Dad down and shamed him. He met me after school.

“Why didnt you tell me?”

“Would you have come back?”

“No. But you could live with me.”

“And Lucy?”

Dad stayed silent. I shook my head and walked toward home.

“Wait! Lucy could stay with Gran.”

“Grans got a new husband. Shes not interested.”

“Right. Takes after her” Dad cut himself off.

He still tried speaking to his ex-mother-in-law.

“John, are you mad? Why would I want little ones? Ive a second youth, so to speak.”

“But Lucys your granddaughter!”

“Pity.”

“What?!” Dad gaped.

“Pity motherhoods obvious, but fatherhood isnt. If Id had a son, and hed childrenwhos to say theyre mine? But there she is, clearly mine. And still, Ive my own life.”

“Christ. Why did I marry Jane? Shouldve looked closer at you first.”

One morning, I woke to find Mum gone. Her junk remainedshed only spared mine and Lucys roombut shed vanished. I opened the window; icy air dulled the reek. Fed Lucy, nibbled something myself. Took her to Mrs. Marys.

“Mums gone. Ive school.”

“Gone? In this freeze? Where?”

My wayward, broken mother ended her days on a distant tip. Why she froze instead of coming homeno one knew. Mrs. Mary said authorities would decide our fate now. And they came. A woman surveyed our flat and turned to Mrs. Mary.

“Could we handle the paperwork at yours?”

“Come through,” Mrs. Mary shrugged.

“Hold it.” Dads voice rang up the stairs. “Sorryjust off route. Theyre my kids.”

“And the flats yours?” the social worker smirked.

Dad didnt even glance inside. “Pack your things, Tom. Were going home. Well sort this place later.”

“And Lucy?” I whispered, terrified.

“Of course. Lucy, you too.”

My sister peeled herself from the wall and shuffled toward him.

“Daddy?”

“Yes, love?”

“Is it really you?”

He scooped her up, holding tight with a heavy sigh.

“Its me. Im here. Its alright.”

“Dont leave again, Daddy!” Lucy wailed.

I froze. Now shed spill everything, and the stern woman would take us despite having a living, legal father. But the social worker had lost interest, gossiping with Mrs. Mary. And Dad, tears streaming, held Lucy close. Hed tried so hard to resent her, to stay awaybut love for her, for us, his children, won in the end.

“I wont. Im never leaving you again.”

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