З життя
My brother told me that our mum hit his wife, and I immediately sensed that something wasn’t right.
I found myself wandering along a seemingly endless pebble beach in Brighton, the sky swirling with teal and lavender clouds, when suddenly my phone vibrated in my hand. It was my mother, her voice a storm of sobs winding through the receiver. She sounded absolutely lost, pulled apart by invisible threads of panic. The moment was fractured, time folding in on itself; when I hung up, I immediately rang my brother Simon, hoping for clarity. But he snapped at me, refusing to explain, insisting I speak to Mum myself and muttered something chilling about just desserts.
Unease slithered in, cold as the sea mist. My husband, Jack, glanced at me with concern, so we abandoned our plans, leaving our sun-bleached hotel room and forfeiting our pricey train tickets. Home called, its urgency overpowering.
Arriving back in our old terraced house in Portsmouth, we found Mum still trembling, her hands shaking like flower stems in the wind. We gave her a spoonful of valerian tonic to help her settle. Her voice, small and shaky, unraveled the strange events: shed come back from her job at the library, only to discover my sister-in-law, Emily, in the hallwayher arms streaked with bruises, her eyes stormy. Emily was heavily pregnant, and Mum was immediately smothered by worry. She reached out to comfort her, but at that moment, Simon burst through the door. Emily leapt up and spun a wild accusation at Mum, shouting about cruelty and blame.
Mum could only stand there, rooted to the spot, bewildered by the surreal tableau. Simon believed his wifes tale without pauserage twisted his face, and he drove Mum out of the house in a torrent of words. Later, he rushed Emily to the hospital, icy dread following them, but there Emily sadly miscarried. Simon refused to listen to explanations; he wouldnt pick up the phone, and anger festered in him like mould in the walls. But a strange certainty whispered at the edge of my mindI trusted Mums word, no matter how muddled the circumstances.
Then, one rain-drenched afternoon, a revelation slipped into the storys cracks. Emilys friend, Charlotteusually reserved, yet radiating quiet kindnesssought me out. In hushed tones, she revealed the jagged truth: Emily had orchestrated everything, plotting to pit Simon against our mother and push her out, and the bruises and tragedy were born of her own intentions. When Simon learned the true story, fury consumed him; in a fit of outrage, he cast Emily out immediately. Later, regret and sorrow mingling in his voice, he came to Mum and begged forgiveness.
A mothers heart, always patient even after rain and ruin, mended gently; Mum opened her arms to Simon, the corners of her lips lifting in a tremulous smile. In the odd logic of dreams, the whole saga faded into the gentle lap of waves far out on the moonlit Brighton shore.
