At a family pool party, my daughter Lily ran toward the water, laughing—until my sister stopped her cold. “She’s not allowed,” she said, while every other child splashed freely.
Lily cried. We left in silence.
Later, my sister finally told me why. A year earlier, while Lily was under our mother’s care, she’d slipped under the water in that same pool. My sister pulled her out in time. My mother begged her to keep it secret—and she did.
“She was fine,” my sister said, shaking. “But I’ve never stopped being scared.”
I stood there stunned. Angry she hid the truth. Grateful Lily was safe. Heartbroken that fear had turned into exclusion.
Now I don’t know what hurts more—the secret itself, or the fact that I was never trusted with it.
