“We need to speak to your daughter.”
Their expressions had been bleak, their demeanour professionally detached.
No-one would tell me why.
Now policemen come and go, talking in undertones, glancing over their shoulders at me. Not curiously, not compassionately… something else.
Crowds murmur outside, flashes bounce off the windows and parents are shepherded past me, partially screened from my view. Their grief is heart-rending, primitive in its despair.
And then I’m told.
Time stands still, and I fast-rewind to the moment of her birth, plump and perfect in my arms, my own diminutive angel.
Someone, somewhere, has made a terrible mistake.
Manchester was our home city; we were both born within a few miles radius and the city centre was where I studied, where I worked for many years, and where we went for fun as teenagers and young adults. Our only worry in those days was whether we’d catch the last bus home, not whether we’d ever go home again. Our hearts go out to the victims and their families, and our thanks, as ever, to the support services. What happened on Monday night was devastating, but if the terrorist ‘community’ thinks it can break the spirit of Manchester, and this country – someone, somewhere, has made a terrible mistake.
This week’s photo from Friday Fictioneers was supplied by J Hardy Carroll and aptly chosen by Rochelle Wisoff Fields, the leader of this friendly, civilised and talented community.
Not just topical, the mother’s grief is heart-rending.
LikeLike
As is her guilt, I expect. Thanks for reading Reena.
LikeLiked by 1 person
That is exactly the incomprehension with whichwe face barbarity, whatever its source
LikeLike
Particularly if the source of the barbarism is our own flesh and blood, I should imagine.
LikeLike
My thoughts went inevitably in the same direction this week Sandra. Such a tragedy. I can only imagine what all the parents involved are going through.
LikeLike
I’m sure it must be the worst kind of nightmare. How do you ever get over something like that.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Dear Sandra,
Heartbreaking. I can’t imagine…don’t want to imagine what parents and grandparents are going through. Well written as always.
Shalom,
Rochelle
LikeLiked by 1 person
It must be unbearable, Rochelle, truly unbearable. thanks for reading.
LikeLike
So powerful. You are right, there are other people facing pain after an awful event like this.
LikeLike
Thanks for reading Claire.
LikeLiked by 1 person
It is impossible to image a parents grief at the lose of a child in the manner of what happened two days back at Manchester. Manchester is one of my favourite places, both my wife and I have lived and worked there.
LikeLike
We have happy memories of our time there. I recently wrote a story about the IRA bombing of the cty centre, back in the nineties, but this is so much worse.
LikeLike
“Would you say Jeffery was a happy child, Mrs. Dahmer?” Great story full of foreboding.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Very well written. There’s a whole new set of fears for this generation.
LikeLike
Indeed.
LikeLike
I guessed there would be a few on this topic (mine included!) following the events in Manchester this week with such a scene for the prompt. Well written, Sandra.
LikeLike
Thank you Clare.
LikeLike
Oh! the unbearable pain.
LikeLike
Yes. Thanks for reading Neel.
LikeLike
I’m so sorry about the horror of what’s happened in Manchester. These random acts of violent terror at concerts and places of happiness and celebration sickens me to the core. In my great grandparents’ day, lists of children lost in the battlefields appeared in the paper. However, being in Australia, mostly our civilians were safe. This is a different kind of war, where the victims aren’t military. A former work colleague of mine was one of the hostages in the Lindt Cafe terrorist siege here in Sydney where 2 people were killed along with the gunman. Two and a half years later, the court case is drawing to a close and it must seem never-ending.
At the same time, these terrible acts of violence also bring out the good in people and while there was a tragic loss of life, lives were also saved through the actions of strangers and there’s been such an outpouring of love for all affected. Goodness needs to triumph over such despicable evil and that is up to each and every one of us.
I have been part of an international blogging group A Thousand Voices for Compassion for a couple of years. It’s been hard to quite know how to respond to these global acts of terror and writing was the best way I knew how.
xx Rowena
LikeLike
Thank you for reading, and for your thoughts, Rowena.
LikeLike
Brilliant title.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Very well written, Sandra…and you have nailed the grief
LikeLike
Thanks, Sue.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Seems to echo the recent spate of shootings in schools. Nothing can soothe the pain of a parent asking, where did I go wrong?
LikeLike
It’s hard to imagine yourself in their shoes. Thanks for reading.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I read this two ways, and each is horrible in its own way. The mother could be the mother of a victim — but then, what if she was the mother of a perpetrator? How horrible would that be? Excellent writing Sandy.
LikeLike
Welcome back. it’s meant to be the second interpretation, given the first line. But either way, her predicament is dreadful.
LikeLike
Chilling, wrenching. So beautifully written.
LikeLike
Thank you Karen.
LikeLiked by 1 person
You’ve definitely captured the bewildered parent’s feelings. Well done.
LikeLike
Thanks Christine.
LikeLike
Very sad and well written
LikeLiked by 1 person
The memory of holding the newborn baby is especially vivid. Somehow it’s like the phantom pain after a severed limb… deeper than sorrow, a physical pain…
LikeLike
Thanks for reading Bjorn. Hope all is well with you.
LikeLike
My heart goes out to everyone the awful tragedy in Manchester has touched. It is on my mind and must torment you tremendously. Your story was very touching.
LikeLike
Thank you!
LikeLike
Well done. Evocative. I was listening to the news on my way home tonight, and tears were pouring down my cheeks. It’s impossible to understand–or accept–the evil behind this heinous act. Blessing to you and and friends/family, and especially to those who lost their precious children.
LikeLike
Thanks for reading. A very sad time for many.
LikeLike
Her grief is possibly worse than the families of the murdered. Well written.
LikeLike
Grief is bad enough, but grief tempered with guilt must be appalling. Thanks for reading Liz.
LikeLike
Sandra, your story is strong and emotional without floundering in emotion, which is just great writing. You have offered details that lead me to think that perhaps the daughter has done something awful. I often wonder how parents who have a child who kills would feel, behave, and all of the turmoil in their hearts.
LikeLike
Thank you Sascha. Your comments are appreciated.
LikeLike
I grew up near Manchester, lived there – my son was born within sight of Man City’s ground. It’s a wonderful city filled with great people and that this happened there – or anywhere – is too awful to imagine.
A wonderfully written piece, conveying the shock and horror so well.
LikeLike
Thanks for reading Lynn. I don’t get back to Manchester very much these days, but I have some very happy memories of my time there, as I guess you do too.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yes, we loved living there and nly moved away for work. We lived in Chorlton cum Hardy at the time, a great place to live. Poor, beleaguered Manchester.
LikeLike
Someone, somewhere, has made a terrible mistake. Yes!
Your story says so much and I agree with Helena, your story can be read two ways.
LikeLike
Thank you Alicia. I meant it to read that the daughter was a guilty party, and to ponder the question whether in some less direct way, the mother was too.
LikeLike
You put me there, in the mother’s shoes. My prayers go out to those families.
LikeLike
We’ve all thought of them a great deal this week, I guess. Thanks for reading Russell.
LikeLike
I like the POV of this. The families of the perpetrators must go through absolute grief, twisting emotions, love for their child, and possibly also outcasted from the community. Your humanity shines through in this story.
LikeLike
Thank you Fatima. It’s hard to put yourself into the minds of those responsible for bringing up children who do such terrible things.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I read it entirely in the second way – rarely do we think about the feelings of the mother whose child has wrecked havoc. You gave us a glimpse into that terrible tragedy very evocatively.
LikeLike
Thank you Dahlia.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Very powerful. One can but try to bring kids up the best way possible, but sometimes other influences step in with tragic consequences.
LikeLike
Exactly so. Thanks for reading.
LikeLiked by 1 person
So well written. The poor mother knowing what her daughter has done, and potentially having to hide her grief because she will not be supported as the parents of the victims are. An unenviable position to be in.
LikeLike
You got right to the heart of what I was trying to convey, Sarah Ann. Thank you.
LikeLike
this is sad. it’s something we have to live with nowadays.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Great tribute
LikeLike
Thank you Michael.
LikeLike
It tears at the heart. I cried as a mother on the TV was saying how she missed her daughter. I have a daughter and part of me would die if anything like that happened. The people of Manchester were wonderful in the hours afterward. Good writing as always, Sandra. —- Suzanne
LikeLike
It’s been a terrible week for the families and friends of the victims. Hopefully they will find comfort in the reactions of the wider community.
LikeLike
I like the ambivalence. I’m not sure if the daughter is victim or perpetrator – either way, the mother’s pain and bewilderment is powerful.
LikeLike
Thank you Sarah.
LikeLike
Interesting story. I imagined the daughter as the perpetrator, and your story reminded me of Jodi Picoult’s Nineteen Minutes–a great book, by the way. I was so sorry to learn of the terror attack in Manchester, which clearly touched you so personally. Thanks for sharing your thoughts and your story.
LikeLike
Thanks for reading, Emily.
LikeLike
That penultimate paragraph says it all. After the Manchester attack, I kept thinking that the mother of the suicide bomber once held him in her arms as a newborn baby and most likely looked at him through eyes of love. Just as well we don’t know what the future holds for us.
LikeLike
You’re so right, Sarah.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Never forget.
LikeLike