I Know Best – What on earth is going on? – Dimitri wearily crouched before his daughter, inspecting the rosy patches on her cheeks. – Again… Four-year-old Sophie stood in the middle of the room, patient and oddly grown-up, already used to these check-ups, her parents’ worried faces, endless ointments and pills. Maria approached and sat beside her husband, gently tucking a strand of hair behind their daughter’s ear. – These medicines aren’t working. At all. May as well be giving her water. And the doctors at the clinic… they aren’t doctors, more like who knows what. This is the third new treatment, and it’s made no difference. Dimitri stood and rubbed the bridge of his nose. Outside, the world was grey—the day promised to be as dull as all the others before it. They hurriedly packed up—Sophie bundled in her warm coat—and half an hour later, they were seated in his mother’s flat. Olga fussed, shook her head, stroked her granddaughter’s back. – So little, and already on so many medicines. It’s such a strain on her body, – she perched Sophie on her knee, and the little girl nestled close—familiar comfort. – It’s heartbreaking. – We wish we didn’t have to give them, – Maria sat at the edge of the sofa, fingers intertwined. – But the allergy won’t go away. We’ve eliminated everything—absolutely everything. She only eats the most basic foods, and still, the rash persists. – And what do the doctors say? – Nothing concrete. They can’t pinpoint it. We do tests, take samples, and the result… – Maria waved a hand – this result, here, on her cheeks. Olga sighed and smoothed Sophie’s collar. – Hopefully she’ll outgrow it. Kids sometimes do. But for now, no comfort. Dimitri gazed at his daughter. Small and thin. Big, thoughtful eyes. He stroked her hair, and memories flickered—snatching pastries from the kitchen as a child, begging for sweets, eating his mum’s jam straight from the jar… But his daughter? Boiled veg. Boiled meat. Water. No fruit, no treats, no proper children’s food. Four years old, on a diet stricter than some ulcer patients. – We don’t know what else there is to cut, – he spoke quietly. – Her diet’s nearly nothing as it is. The drive home was silent. Sophie dozed in the backseat; Dimitri checked her in the mirror every so often. At least she wasn’t scratching. – Mum called, – Maria spoke up. – She wants Sophie next weekend. She’s got tickets for the puppet theatre, wants to take her. – Theatre? – Dimitri changed gear. – That’ll be nice. Good distraction. – I thought so too. She could use it. …On Saturday, Dimitri parked outside his mother-in-law’s and carried Sophie from the car seat. She blinked sleepily, rubbing her eyes—woken too early. He picked her up, and she snuggled into his neck, warm and weightless as a sparrow. Mrs Taylor appeared on the porch, arms thrown wide as if welcoming a shipwreck survivor. – Oh, my dear, my little ray of sunshine, – she scooped up Sophie, hugging her close to her vast chest. – So pale, so thin. Her cheeks are hollow. You lot have worn her out with your diets, you’re ruining her. Dimitri thrust his hands in his pockets, holding back irritation. It was always the same. – We’re doing it for her sake. There’s a reason, you know. – What sort of sake? – Mrs Taylor pursed her lips, inspecting Sophie as though—just returned from a prison camp. – Skin and bone. Some childhood—she should be growing, not starved. She carried Sophie inside, not looking back, leaving the door to click shut. Dimitri lingered at the gate, a sensation nagging at the edge of his mind, some half-formed hunch that vanished like mist. He rubbed his forehead, waited one more minute listening to the quiet of this foreign yard, then sighed and returned to the car. A weekend without their daughter—a strange, nearly-forgotten feeling. On Saturday, he and Maria trawled the supermarket aisles, piling up groceries for the week. At home, he spent three hours fixing the leaky bathroom tap. Maria emptied wardrobes and packed old things into bags for the tip. The usual chores, but the absence of Sophie’s voice made the flat feel wrong, too empty. In the evening, they ordered pizza—the mozzarella and basil kind, forbidden to Sophie. Opened a bottle of red, sat talking about nothing much—work, their postponed holiday plans, the never-ending renovations. – It’s nice, – Maria said, then paused, biting her lip. – I mean… you know. Just quiet. Peaceful. – I know, – Dimitri covered her hand with his. – I miss her too. But we needed the break. On Sunday, he went to pick up their daughter just before sunset. The garden glowed orange beneath old apple trees. Mrs Taylor’s place, in the evening light, seemed almost cosy. Dimitri stepped from the car, pushed open the gate—its hinges groaned—and stopped short. Sophie was sitting on the porch. Mrs Taylor beside her, radiating sheer happiness. In her hands was a pastry. Big, golden, shiny with butter. And Sophie was devouring it. Cheeks smeared, crumbs on her chin, eyes sparkling—happier than he’d seen in ages. For a moment, Dimitri simply stared. Then a surge of hot anger swept up from his chest. He strode forward, snatched the pastry away. – What’s this supposed to be?! Mrs Taylor jumped, shrank back, her face turning red from neck to hairline. She flailed her hands, desperate to wave away his fury. – It’s just a tiny piece! No harm done, honestly. Dimitri wasn’t listening. He scooped Sophie up—she went quiet, clutching his coat in fright—and headed for the car. Buckled her in, hands trembling with rage. Sophie gazed at him, lips quivering, about to cry. – It’s okay, darling, – he stroked her head, forcing his voice to sound calm. – Just wait here for Daddy, alright? He shut the door and marched back to the house. Mrs Taylor was rooted to the porch, fiddling with her dressing gown, blotchy and pale. – Dimi, you don’t understand… – I don’t understand?! – he stopped short, exploding. – Six months! Six months, and we couldn’t work out what was wrong with our daughter! Tests, allergy screenings—do you have any idea what it all cost us? The stress, sleepless nights?! Mrs Taylor edged back toward the door. – I was only trying to help… – Help?! – Dimitri advanced. – She’s been on boiled chicken and water! We’ve cut out every single possible allergen! And you—you secretly feed her fried pastries? – I was building up her immunity, – Mrs Taylor suddenly bristled, chin raised. – A little at a time, to get her body used to it. One bit more and it would’ve cleared up, thanks to me! I know what I’m doing—I’ve raised three kids! Dimitri looked at her, unrecognising. This woman he’d endured for years, for his wife, for peace—she was poisoning his child. On purpose. Convinced she knew better than any doctor. – Three kids, – he repeated quietly. Mrs Taylor paled. – Doesn’t mean they’re all the same. Sophie isn’t your daughter—she’s mine. And you won’t see her again. – What?! – Mrs Taylor clutched the rail. – You have no right! – I do. He walked to the car, shouts erupting behind him. But Dimitri didn’t look back. Started the engine. In the rear-view, his mother-in-law’s frantic silhouette flared behind the gate as he pulled away. At home, Maria met them in the hallway. One look—his face, their tearful daughter—and she understood. – What happened? Dimitri explained. Briefly, coldly, all emotion spent outside. Maria listened, face hardening. Then she picked up her phone. – Mum. Yes, he told me. How could you?! Dimitri got Sophie into the bath—to wash away the pastry and tears. In the next room, Maria’s voice—sharp, unfamiliar—rang out. She scolded her mother as he’d never heard before. Her words finished loud and clear: “Until we’ve sorted the allergy—no visits, Mum.” Two months passed… Sunday lunch at Olga’s was now a tradition. Today, a sponge cake with cream and strawberries sat on the table. And Sophie was eating it herself, big spoon, getting cream everywhere. Her cheeks—perfectly clear. – Would you believe it, – Olga shook her head. – Sunflower oil. Such a rare allergy. – Doctor said it happens to one in a thousand, – Maria spread butter on her bread. – The moment we cut it out and switched to olive oil—her rash vanished in two weeks. Dimitri couldn’t stop watching his daughter. Rosy cheeks, shining eyes, cream on her nose. A happy child, finally able to eat real food—cakes, biscuits, everything made without sunflower oil. Turns out, that’s a lot. Relations with his mother-in-law stayed chilly. Mrs Taylor called, apologised, cried down the phone. Maria kept her replies short and brisk. Dimitri didn’t speak to her at all. Sophie reached for more cake, and Olga moved the plate closer. – Go on, love. Eat as much as you like. Dimitri leaned back in his chair. Outside, rain fell; inside, warmth and the scent of baking. His daughter was better. Nothing else mattered.

I know better

Honestly, what is going on, David muttered as he crouched down beside his daughter and inspected the pink blotches on her cheeks. Again

Four-year-old Emily stood in the centre of the living room, patient and oddly serious for her age. Shed become used to these examinations, her parents worried faces, endless ointments and tablets.

Sarah walked over and knelt next to her husband. Her fingers gently brushed a strand of hair off Emilys face.

These medicines dont work. At all. Might as well give her water, she sighed. And the doctors at the surgery theyre not doctors, more like guesswork. Its the third time theyve changed her treatment, and nothing.

David stood up and rubbed the bridge of his nose. Outside, the sky was grey, and the day promised to be just as dull as all the others. They got ready quicklyEmily wrapped tight in her warm coatand half an hour later they sat in his mothers flat.

Margaret fussed, shook her head, stroked her granddaughters back.

So little, and so many medicines. Its an awful thing for her body, she said, then sat Emily on her knees, and the girl nestled close, already used to this comfort. Breaks my heart watching her.

Wed rather not give her any, Sarah gripped her fingers together. But the allergies just wont go. Weve cleared everything out. She only eats basic foodsboiled veg, plain meat, waterand still the rash appears.

And what do the doctors say?

Nothing concrete. They cant pin it down. Tests, blood work, samplessame result every time. Sarah waved a hand. Her cheeks.

Margaret sighed and adjusted Emilys collar.

Maybe shell grow out of it. Sometimes children do, dont they? Hasnt been much comfort though, has it?

David looked silently at his daughter. Small, thin, with big watchful eyes. He stroked her hair, and memories of his own childhood surfacedsneaking buns from the kitchen, nagging his mother for sweets, scooping jam straight from the jar with a spoon. But his little girl Boiled vegetables. Boiled meat. Water. No fruit, no cakes, no proper childrens food. Four years old on a diet stricter than most adults.

We dont know what else there is to remove, he said quietly. Theres nearly nothing left.

They drove home in silence. Emily dozed in the back seat, and David kept glancing at her in the mirror. Sleeping peacefully. At least she wasnt scratching.

Mum called, Sarah spoke up. She wants Emily next weekend. Got tickets for the puppet theatre. Wants to take her out.

The theatre? David changed gear. Thats good. A bit of distraction would do her good.

I thought so too. She could use a break.

On Saturday, David pulled up outside his mother-in-laws house and lifted Emily from the car seat. She blinked sleepily, rubbed her eyes with fiststoo early, not enough sleep. He scooped her up and she nuzzled into his neck, warm and light as a sparrow.

Linda floated out onto the porch wearing a brightly patterned dressing gown, arms thrown wide as if greeting not a granddaughter but a survivor of shipwreck.

Oh my precious darling, sunshine, she cried, hugging Emily tight against her ample chest. So pale, so skinny. Her cheeks are sunk. Youre starving her with these diets, youll ruin her.

David shoved his hands in his pockets, holding back his irritation. It was always the same.

Were only doing whats best for her. Not by choice, as you know.

Whats best? Linda pursed her lips, eyeing Emily as if shed just walked out of a prison camp. Skin and bones. Children need to grow; youre starving her.

She carried Emily inside without so much as a glance, and the door closed quietly behind them. David lingered at the gate, something gnawing at the edge of his thoughts, a hunch trying to form but slipping away like morning fog. He rubbed his forehead, waited another minute, listening to the unfamiliar silence, then turned and walked back to the car.

A weekend without a child in the housea strange, nearly forgotten feeling. On Saturday he and Sarah visited the supermarket, pushing a trolley up and down the aisles, stocking up for the week.

At home, he spent hours tinkering with a leaky tap in the bathroom, which had dripped for months. Sarah sorted out cupboards, packed old clothes in bags for charity. Ordinary, domestic busyness, but without the sound of a childs voice the flat felt incomplete, oddly hollow.

That evening, they ordered pizzamozzarella and basil, the very kind Emily wasnt allowed to eat. Opened a bottle of red wine. Sat in the kitchen chatting about nothing in particularwork, holiday plans, the renovation that never quite finished.

Its nice, Sarah said suddenly, then bit her lip. I mean you know what I mean. Its quiet. Calm.

I know, David covered her hand with his. I miss her too. But its good for us to rest.

On Sunday, he went for Emily near sunset. The sun was low, bathing the streets in thick orange light. Lindas house sat at the back of the garden, behind old apple trees, almost cosy in the golden glow.

David stepped from the car, pushed open the garden gatethe hinges creakedand hesitated.

His daughter was on the porch. Sitting next to her, Linda leaned in with pure delight. In her hand: a bun, large and golden, glistening with butter. And Emily was eating it. Her cheeks smeared, crumbs on her chin, eyes sparkling with joyeyes David hadnt seen so bright in ages.

He stood frozen for a few moments, then felt something hot and fierce surge inside him.

He strode forward, snatched the bun from Lindas hand.

Whats this?!

Linda flinched, recoiled. Her face flushed red from neck to hairline.

She shook her hands as if trying to wave away his anger.

Its just a little piece! What harm in a bun

David didnt listen. He scooped Emily into his armsshe shrank in fear, clutching his coatand carried her swiftly to the car. He strapped her into the seat, struggling with trembling fingers. Emily stared at him, eyes wide and lips quivering, on the verge of tears.

Its alright, sweetheart, he stroked her hair, voice as steady as he could manage. Just sit here a moment. Daddyll be right back.

He closed the door and marched back to the house. Linda still stood on the step, twisting at her gown, her face mottled.

David, you dont understand

Dont understand?! He halted in front of her and let the anger out. Six months! Six months weve been trying to understand whats wrong with our daughter! Tests, investigations, allergy checksyou have any idea what all that cost us? The sleepless nights, the worry?

Linda backed toward the door.

I was only trying to help

Help?! David stepped forward. We kept her on water and boiled chicken! Cleared everything from her diet! And you sneak her fried buns when were not looking?

I was building her immunity! Linda squared her chin at last. Little bits, so her body would get used to it. Another week and her rash would be gonethanks to me! I know what Im doing; I raised three children myself!

David stared at her, bewildered. This woman, tolerated for the sake of his wife and family peace, was poisoning his childwith full conviction she knew better than any doctor.

Three children, he repeated quietly, and Linda blanched. And? All children are different. Emilys not your childshes mine. And you wont be seeing her anymore.

What?! Linda grabbed the railings. You cant do that!

I can.

He turned and walked to the car. Shouts rang out behind him. But David didn’t look back. He climbed in, started the engine. In the rearview mirror, Linda appeared at the gate, arms flailing. He pressed the accelerator.

At home, Sarah was waiting in the hall. One look at Davids face, at their tearful daughter, and she understood without asking.

What happened?

David told her, short and coldhis emotions spent. Sarah listened silently; her face turned hard, pale. Then she took out her phone.

Mum. Yes, Davids told me. How could you?!

David ran a bath for Emilywashing away the sticky traces of bun and tears. Through the door, Sarahs voice echoed, sharp and unfamiliar. She never spoke to her mother like that. At the end came a resolute: Until this allergy is sorted, you wont be seeing Emily.

Two months passed

Sunday lunches at Margarets had become a tradition. Today, on the table, a sponge cake with cream and fresh strawberries gleamed. And Emily tucked in, a big spoon clutched in her little hand, cream smeared from ear to ear. Her cheeks were clear, not a blotch in sight.

Who wouldve thought, Margaret shook her head, It was sunflower oil. So rare an allergy.

The doctor said it affects one in a thousand, Sarah spread butter on her bread. Once we took it out and switched to olive oiltwo weeks and it vanished.

David gazed at his daughter, unable to stop smiling. Pink cheeks, shining eyes, cream on her nosea happy child at last, eating like any other. Cakes, biscuits, as long as they were made without sunflower oil. Which turned out to be more than enough.

Relations with Linda stayed frosty. She rang, apologised, cried down the line. Sarah answered briefly, distant. David didnt speak to her at all.

Emily reached for another spoonful of cake, and Margaret shifted the plate closer.

Eat up, sweetheart. Enjoy.”

David leaned back. Rain tapped the windows, but inside it was warm, filled with the aroma of baking. His daughter was well againnothing else mattered.

Life, he thought, is never as simple as I know better. Sometimes, putting pride aside and listeningto doctors, to each other, to the real needs of those we loveis what truly helps a child thrive.

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I Know Best – What on earth is going on? – Dimitri wearily crouched before his daughter, inspecting the rosy patches on her cheeks. – Again… Four-year-old Sophie stood in the middle of the room, patient and oddly grown-up, already used to these check-ups, her parents’ worried faces, endless ointments and pills. Maria approached and sat beside her husband, gently tucking a strand of hair behind their daughter’s ear. – These medicines aren’t working. At all. May as well be giving her water. And the doctors at the clinic… they aren’t doctors, more like who knows what. This is the third new treatment, and it’s made no difference. Dimitri stood and rubbed the bridge of his nose. Outside, the world was grey—the day promised to be as dull as all the others before it. They hurriedly packed up—Sophie bundled in her warm coat—and half an hour later, they were seated in his mother’s flat. Olga fussed, shook her head, stroked her granddaughter’s back. – So little, and already on so many medicines. It’s such a strain on her body, – she perched Sophie on her knee, and the little girl nestled close—familiar comfort. – It’s heartbreaking. – We wish we didn’t have to give them, – Maria sat at the edge of the sofa, fingers intertwined. – But the allergy won’t go away. We’ve eliminated everything—absolutely everything. She only eats the most basic foods, and still, the rash persists. – And what do the doctors say? – Nothing concrete. They can’t pinpoint it. We do tests, take samples, and the result… – Maria waved a hand – this result, here, on her cheeks. Olga sighed and smoothed Sophie’s collar. – Hopefully she’ll outgrow it. Kids sometimes do. But for now, no comfort. Dimitri gazed at his daughter. Small and thin. Big, thoughtful eyes. He stroked her hair, and memories flickered—snatching pastries from the kitchen as a child, begging for sweets, eating his mum’s jam straight from the jar… But his daughter? Boiled veg. Boiled meat. Water. No fruit, no treats, no proper children’s food. Four years old, on a diet stricter than some ulcer patients. – We don’t know what else there is to cut, – he spoke quietly. – Her diet’s nearly nothing as it is. The drive home was silent. Sophie dozed in the backseat; Dimitri checked her in the mirror every so often. At least she wasn’t scratching. – Mum called, – Maria spoke up. – She wants Sophie next weekend. She’s got tickets for the puppet theatre, wants to take her. – Theatre? – Dimitri changed gear. – That’ll be nice. Good distraction. – I thought so too. She could use it. …On Saturday, Dimitri parked outside his mother-in-law’s and carried Sophie from the car seat. She blinked sleepily, rubbing her eyes—woken too early. He picked her up, and she snuggled into his neck, warm and weightless as a sparrow. Mrs Taylor appeared on the porch, arms thrown wide as if welcoming a shipwreck survivor. – Oh, my dear, my little ray of sunshine, – she scooped up Sophie, hugging her close to her vast chest. – So pale, so thin. Her cheeks are hollow. You lot have worn her out with your diets, you’re ruining her. Dimitri thrust his hands in his pockets, holding back irritation. It was always the same. – We’re doing it for her sake. There’s a reason, you know. – What sort of sake? – Mrs Taylor pursed her lips, inspecting Sophie as though—just returned from a prison camp. – Skin and bone. Some childhood—she should be growing, not starved. She carried Sophie inside, not looking back, leaving the door to click shut. Dimitri lingered at the gate, a sensation nagging at the edge of his mind, some half-formed hunch that vanished like mist. He rubbed his forehead, waited one more minute listening to the quiet of this foreign yard, then sighed and returned to the car. A weekend without their daughter—a strange, nearly-forgotten feeling. On Saturday, he and Maria trawled the supermarket aisles, piling up groceries for the week. At home, he spent three hours fixing the leaky bathroom tap. Maria emptied wardrobes and packed old things into bags for the tip. The usual chores, but the absence of Sophie’s voice made the flat feel wrong, too empty. In the evening, they ordered pizza—the mozzarella and basil kind, forbidden to Sophie. Opened a bottle of red, sat talking about nothing much—work, their postponed holiday plans, the never-ending renovations. – It’s nice, – Maria said, then paused, biting her lip. – I mean… you know. Just quiet. Peaceful. – I know, – Dimitri covered her hand with his. – I miss her too. But we needed the break. On Sunday, he went to pick up their daughter just before sunset. The garden glowed orange beneath old apple trees. Mrs Taylor’s place, in the evening light, seemed almost cosy. Dimitri stepped from the car, pushed open the gate—its hinges groaned—and stopped short. Sophie was sitting on the porch. Mrs Taylor beside her, radiating sheer happiness. In her hands was a pastry. Big, golden, shiny with butter. And Sophie was devouring it. Cheeks smeared, crumbs on her chin, eyes sparkling—happier than he’d seen in ages. For a moment, Dimitri simply stared. Then a surge of hot anger swept up from his chest. He strode forward, snatched the pastry away. – What’s this supposed to be?! Mrs Taylor jumped, shrank back, her face turning red from neck to hairline. She flailed her hands, desperate to wave away his fury. – It’s just a tiny piece! No harm done, honestly. Dimitri wasn’t listening. He scooped Sophie up—she went quiet, clutching his coat in fright—and headed for the car. Buckled her in, hands trembling with rage. Sophie gazed at him, lips quivering, about to cry. – It’s okay, darling, – he stroked her head, forcing his voice to sound calm. – Just wait here for Daddy, alright? He shut the door and marched back to the house. Mrs Taylor was rooted to the porch, fiddling with her dressing gown, blotchy and pale. – Dimi, you don’t understand… – I don’t understand?! – he stopped short, exploding. – Six months! Six months, and we couldn’t work out what was wrong with our daughter! Tests, allergy screenings—do you have any idea what it all cost us? The stress, sleepless nights?! Mrs Taylor edged back toward the door. – I was only trying to help… – Help?! – Dimitri advanced. – She’s been on boiled chicken and water! We’ve cut out every single possible allergen! And you—you secretly feed her fried pastries? – I was building up her immunity, – Mrs Taylor suddenly bristled, chin raised. – A little at a time, to get her body used to it. One bit more and it would’ve cleared up, thanks to me! I know what I’m doing—I’ve raised three kids! Dimitri looked at her, unrecognising. This woman he’d endured for years, for his wife, for peace—she was poisoning his child. On purpose. Convinced she knew better than any doctor. – Three kids, – he repeated quietly. Mrs Taylor paled. – Doesn’t mean they’re all the same. Sophie isn’t your daughter—she’s mine. And you won’t see her again. – What?! – Mrs Taylor clutched the rail. – You have no right! – I do. He walked to the car, shouts erupting behind him. But Dimitri didn’t look back. Started the engine. In the rear-view, his mother-in-law’s frantic silhouette flared behind the gate as he pulled away. At home, Maria met them in the hallway. One look—his face, their tearful daughter—and she understood. – What happened? Dimitri explained. Briefly, coldly, all emotion spent outside. Maria listened, face hardening. Then she picked up her phone. – Mum. Yes, he told me. How could you?! Dimitri got Sophie into the bath—to wash away the pastry and tears. In the next room, Maria’s voice—sharp, unfamiliar—rang out. She scolded her mother as he’d never heard before. Her words finished loud and clear: “Until we’ve sorted the allergy—no visits, Mum.” Two months passed… Sunday lunch at Olga’s was now a tradition. Today, a sponge cake with cream and strawberries sat on the table. And Sophie was eating it herself, big spoon, getting cream everywhere. Her cheeks—perfectly clear. – Would you believe it, – Olga shook her head. – Sunflower oil. Such a rare allergy. – Doctor said it happens to one in a thousand, – Maria spread butter on her bread. – The moment we cut it out and switched to olive oil—her rash vanished in two weeks. Dimitri couldn’t stop watching his daughter. Rosy cheeks, shining eyes, cream on her nose. A happy child, finally able to eat real food—cakes, biscuits, everything made without sunflower oil. Turns out, that’s a lot. Relations with his mother-in-law stayed chilly. Mrs Taylor called, apologised, cried down the phone. Maria kept her replies short and brisk. Dimitri didn’t speak to her at all. Sophie reached for more cake, and Olga moved the plate closer. – Go on, love. Eat as much as you like. Dimitri leaned back in his chair. Outside, rain fell; inside, warmth and the scent of baking. His daughter was better. Nothing else mattered.