"I've said too much," Jack muttered, watching the maître d's smile fade like a dimmer switch. The restaurant fell silent, conversations halting as heads swiveled in his direction. Jack tugged at his waiter's collar. "Occupational hazard of being British. We're supposed to communicate exclusively through weather observations and apologizing."
The woman at table seven stared, her Botoxed forehead struggling to register offense.
"Mr. Harmon, a word." Marcel, the maître d', beckoned him toward the kitchen with a manicured finger.
Jack followed, shoulders hunched. He'd only commented that the woman reminded him of Diana Rigg from "The Avengers," unaware that "you look like you could kill a man with your thighs" wasn't universally considered flattering.
The kitchen doors swung shut with a pneumatic hiss that sounded like the collective sigh of relief from the dining room. The sound triggered an instant, visceral response—a tightening in Jack's chest. Thirty-two years of doors closing behind him, each reducing his world a little more.
"Jack, what did we discuss about customer interactions?" Marcel's French-accented voice dripped with the particular condescension reserved for speaking to children and convicted felons. "Brief, professional, invisible."
"I was aiming for charming." Jack scratched the back of his neck. "Landed somewhere closer to 'potential lawsuit,' did I?"
"Given your situation, we've been quite accommodating, wouldn't you say?" Marcel's eyes flicked to the small scar above Jack's eyebrow—the only visible reminder of the violence that had sent him away.
There it was again. Your situation. The delicate phrasing that reminded Jack of his status without explicitly mentioning it. Ex-con. Institutionalized. Damaged goods.
"Right," Jack said, the old prison reflex kicking in. Compliance was survival. "I'll retreat to my natural habitat among the dirty dishes."
"Excellent. And Jack? Your daughter called." Marcel's tone softened slightly. "Something about needing you this evening."
Jack's stomach dropped. Emma never called him at work unless something was wrong.
Three hours later, Jack stood outside the Royal London Hospital, gathering courage. He hadn't seen Emma in nearly a month—not since their explosive argument when she'd accused him of being more comfortable in prison than in her life. The worst part had been his inability to deny it.
Emma lay pale against hospital-white sheets, her pregnant belly a mountain beneath the blanket.
"Dad." Her voice caught, surprise and something softer in her tone.
"They told me you were here." Jack hovered awkwardly. "Is everything...?"
"The baby's pressing on the cord. His heart rate drops with contractions." Emma fiddled with her IV line. "They're talking C-section if it doesn't improve. Which means..."
"Ruby," Jack finished, naming his granddaughter. "Who's looking after her?"
"Lisa can't get her until six. I need you to pick her up from school."
Jack felt panic rising. He'd only met Ruby twice since his release. The silent, solemn-eyed child had regarded him with the wariness of a small animal encountering a predator.
"Em, I don't know if—" Jack ran his hand through his salt-and-pepper hair. "The last time I looked after a child, Teletubbies were considered cutting-edge entertainment."
"Dad, please." Emma's voice cracked. "There's nobody else."
The unspoken truth hung between them—after her mother's death and his incarceration, Emma had grown up with little family. Now, with her partner gone too—vanished back to Spain when Ruby was still a baby—their fractured family tree had few branches to lean on.
"Of course I'll get her." His daughter needed him. "How hard can it be? Children are just small humans who haven't yet learned to hide their contempt for me."
Emma's relief was palpable. "Her school knows you're coming. She takes medication with dinner for anxiety." She squeezed his hand. "And Dad? Don't let her watch the news. Not after last time."
Jack nodded, not asking what "last time" meant. Another gap in his knowledge, another reminder of all he'd missed.
St. Catherine's Primary looked nothing like Jack's childhood schools—all bright colors and posters proclaiming "Every Child Is A Star!" How differently might his life have turned out, he wondered, if he'd been told that instead of learning that mistakes earned beatings?
"Mr. Harmon?" A young teacher approached, leading a small figure. "This is Ruby. Ruby, your grandfather is here."
Ruby, aged ten but small for her years, regarded Jack with dark, serious eyes. She wore a navy uniform with a cardigan that was slightly too big. Around her neck hung a tablet device Jack would later learn was a communication aid she never used.
"Hello, Ruby." Jack crouched awkwardly, knees protesting. "Your mum's going to be in hospital for a bit, so you're stuck with me until Lisa comes. I promise I've improved since my last babysitting stint in 1986."
Ruby didn't respond but didn't pull away when Jack carefully took her small hand.
On the bus home, Ruby produced a notebook, writing in precise handwriting: Is Mum really okay?
"She's being well looked after," Jack said. "The doctors are keeping a close eye on her and the baby."
Ruby considered this, then wrote: They said that about Grandma too. Then she died.
The simple statement hit Jack like a physical blow. He hadn't known Emma's mother had died in hospital—another gap in the vast terrain of his daughter's life.
"This is different," Jack said. "Your mum is young and healthy."
Ruby's dark eyes studied him, then she wrote: Did you have to go to hospital when you were in prison?
Jack felt the blood drain from his face. "Who told you that?"
I heard Mum and Lisa talking. Lisa said we shouldn't leave valuables out. Mum said you're not a thief, you're a murderer.
"Yes," he admitted after a pause. "I did something wrong when I was young. Very young and very stupid, which often go together."
Did you kill someone?
The directness of the question, delivered in a child's neat handwriting, hit him like a punch to the gut.
"Yes," he said finally. "It was an accident, but that doesn't make it right. A man died because I was angry and showing off. I've paid for it—thirty-two years' worth—and I'm trying to be better now."
Ruby absorbed this with unsettling calmness, then wrote: I'm hungry. Mum makes pasta with butter and cheese. Not the green pasta.
By the time Ruby was fed and medicated, Jack had discovered something unexpected: this silent child fascinated him. Every careful gesture revealed a mind working overtime to navigate a world that refused to meet her halfway.
"She's had a rough time," Lisa whispered when she arrived to collect Ruby. "After what happened at her last school..."
"What happened?"
"Some older children took her communication device. Recorded horrible things with it. Put it online." Lisa crossed her arms. "That's when she stopped using it completely."
Jack's hands curled into fists, the old rage surging up like bile. He carefully packed it away—a skill learned through decades of institutional control.
As Lisa prepared to leave, Ruby approached Jack, notebook extended: You're not what I expected.
Before he could respond, she offered her hand for a high-five—a gesture so unexpectedly normal it took his breath away.
That night, Jack's phone buzzed with a text from Emma: "She liked you. Said you weren't as scary as she thought. High praise from Ruby."
He smiled in the darkness. Not scary. It wasn't much, but it was a beginning.
The kitchen doors of Le Petit Jardin swung open as Jack plunged his hands into soapy water.
"Jack." Marcel appeared. "Telephone. Your daughter."
"Emma? What's wrong?"
"Lisa's got food poisoning. She can't take Ruby. Can you pick her up from school?"
Jack glanced at the mountain of dishes. "I'm working until four."
"Please, Dad. I'm trapped here, and Ruby—"
"I'll sort something out."
Marcel raised an eyebrow as Jack hung up. "Problem?"
"My granddaughter needs looking after."
To Jack's surprise, Marcel nodded. "Take the afternoon. Children are more important than dishes, no?"
At Victoria Park, Ruby methodically fed the ducks, movements precise and thoughtful.
"You'll be a big sister soon," Jack said. "That'll be exciting, yeah?"
Ruby wrote quickly: Will you go away again?
The question pierced him. "No. No, I won't."
Promise? The word was underlined twice.
"I promise, Ruby. I'm staying right here."
She studied him with eyes far older than her years, then nodded once—accepting his vow with surprising gravity.
An elderly woman on a bench smiled at Jack. "Your granddaughter?"
"Yes," Jack said, the word still strange in his mouth.
"The quiet ones are often deep thinkers. Storing it all up for later."
Jack watched Ruby navigate the climbing frame with unexpected grace. "Maybe you're right."
Over ice cream, Jack found himself filling the silence with carefully edited stories about Emma as a child.
Ruby wrote: You talk a lot.
"Too much?"
No. I like it. Most people stop talking when I don't answer.
For the first time since his release, Jack wasn't thinking about prison or all he'd lost. He was simply present, pointing out squirrels and cloud shapes to a child who noticed everything and said nothing.
Emma looked paler each day, dark circles beneath her eyes. "How was she?"
"Good. We fed ducks. Had ice cream." Jack perched awkwardly in the visitor's chair. "She's remarkable, Em."
Emma's eyes filled. "I know. I'm trying my best, but it's hard. With everything she's been through, and now this—" she gestured to the monitors. "I feel like I'm failing her."
"You're not," Jack said with unexpected firmness. "She's loved and looked after. That's more than many kids get."
"The doctors say I could be here for weeks. Lisa can't manage Ruby that long with her work schedule."
"I'll help. Whatever you need."
Emma's relief was visible. "Thank you. And Dad? Lisa said Ruby seemed different tonight. More... present. Whatever you did today, it was good for her."
Jack felt a strange warmth spread through his chest—pride, he realized. An unfamiliar sensation.
Two weeks passed in a blur of new routines. Jack worked mornings, collected Ruby after school, and became unexpectedly adept at helping with homework.
Ruby's trust emerged in subtle increments—a sleeve tug instead of writing, sitting closer during nature documentaries, once even falling asleep against his shoulder in the car.
Jack changed too. He stood straighter. Made awkward but genuine small talk with other parents. Started to feel the prison posture melting from his shoulders.
"Jack," Marcel called him aside one Tuesday. "You seem more... settled lately. Starting next week, you'll train as a server again."
Jack nodded, swallowing his irritation at having his humanity reduced to a rehabilitation checklist.
That afternoon, Jack's phone rang—Emma's number.
"Dad?" Her voice was high with panic. "Emergency C-section. Baby's heart rate dropping—"
"I'm on my way."
"No! Stay with Ruby. Lisa's coming here. Ruby can't be alone when she finds out—"
Jack turned to find Ruby watching him, fear already written across her face.
"That was your mum," he said gently. "The doctors need to help get the baby out early."
Ruby's hand trembled as she wrote: Is Mum going to die?
"No, sweetheart. She's in the best place."
My other grandma died in hospital.
Ruby's face crumpled, tears welling. Jack felt utterly helpless—what did he know about comforting a child?
But somehow his arms opened, and Ruby walked into them. He held her as she cried silently against his chest.
"It's okay to be scared," he murmured. "I'm scared too. But we'll be brave together."
When the call finally came two hours later, Jack answered with Ruby pressed against his side.
"It's a boy," Lisa said. "Seven pounds even. Emma's going to be fine."
Ruby sagged with relief, then wrote: What's his name?
"Thomas," Lisa told him. "Thomas Jack Harmon."
Jack's throat tightened. "She used my name?"
"Middle name. I think it's an olive branch."
That night, as Jack prepared to leave, Ruby suddenly activated her communication device. The flat, electronic voice stated simply:
"Thank you for staying."
The next morning at the hospital, Ruby extended a tentative finger toward her new brother, which Thomas promptly grasped. Her face transformed with wonder.
Carefully, Jack cradled his grandson, marveling at how little a new life weighed. Thomas blinked up with unfocused eyes, and Jack felt something crack open inside his chest—a warmth he'd walled off decades ago.
Ruby tugged his sleeve, her notebook held up: He has your eyes.
Jack looked at the baby, then at Ruby, then at Emma. The family resemblance flowed through them all—the same dark eyes, the same stubborn set to the jaw.
"Maybe we could do this more often," Jack suggested later in the hospital canteen. "Even after your mum comes home."
Ruby wrote: I'd like that.
They were gathering their things when Jack bumped into a woman, causing her to spill her coffee.
"I'm so sorry," he exclaimed, grabbing napkins.
The woman looked up, irritated, then her expression changed. "Jack? Jack Harmon?"
Jack froze. Sarah Mitchell, a court clerk from his trial. She'd shown him small kindnesses during that terrible time.
"Sarah," he managed. "It's been—"
"Thirty-two years," she finished, eyes flickering to Ruby.
"My granddaughter," Jack explained quickly.
Ruby reached for her notebook and showed it to Sarah: My grandad is a good person now.
As they walked away, Jack felt heat rising in his face. "You didn't need to say that."
Ruby wrote firmly: It's true.
Jack wasn't sure it was, not entirely. But perhaps it could be, someday.
As they stepped outside, Ruby slipped her hand into his—a silent vote of confidence.
"I've said too much," Jack murmured, thinking of all the missteps he'd made, all the times his words had entangled him in complications. But looking down at Ruby's upturned face, he realized that perhaps, for once, he'd said just enough.
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Congratulations on the win, Alex! I used to live next to the Royal London, lovely to see that and Vicky Park get a namecheck
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Hi Avery,
Thank you for the kind words! 😊 What a wonderful coincidence that you have a personal connection to the story's setting!
There's something magical about anchoring fiction in real London places. The Royal London and Victoria Park felt like natural choices - places with such distinctive character and emotional resonance. Writing those scenes brought back memories of afternoons lost in that magnificent Borders on Charing Cross Road. Remember that place? Those towering shelves, the worn armchairs tucked away in corners, the coffee shop upstairs where you could camp out for hours with a stack of books you hadn't paid for yet. A public library masquerading as a bookshop!
Sometimes I think setting stories in real locations creates an invisible thread connecting writer and reader through shared geography. Those places may change or disappear (still mourning that Borders), but they live on in our stories and memories. ✨
It's always special to hear from someone who recognizes the specific landmarks. Thank you for that little spark of connection! 💫
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Congratulations on your win!
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Hi Glenda,
Thank you so much for the congratulations! 🤗 Such a lovely surprise to receive this kind note.
Writing "Unspoken Orders" felt like getting to know Jack and Ruby as real people - watching their relationship unfold on the page as they discovered their own unique ways of connecting despite their different communication challenges.
There's something special about the writing journey, isn't there? Those moments when characters seem to take on lives of their own and guide the story in unexpected directions. ✨
I appreciate you taking the time to read and share your thoughts!
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It truly is...I fall asleep thinking of someone the lives I've created...I understand what you are saying completely!
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Congratulations! Well-deserved for a well-written story. I enjoyed it and loved the transition Jack starts for his life that weaved through the story. Your descriptions, similes, and metaphors were perfect and not overdone. Loved it.
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Hi Alice,
Thank you for such thoughtful feedback! 😊 I'm particularly touched that you noticed the balance in the descriptive elements.
Finding that sweet spot with language - where it illuminates character and emotion without calling too much attention to itself - was something I really focused on with this story. Jack's transition needed to feel organic rather than forced, those small moments of change accumulating gradually rather than arriving as a sudden transformation.
I've always been fascinated by how people rebuild themselves after profound disruption. Jack's journey from institutionalized man to grandfather wasn't just about learning new roles, but about rediscovering parts of himself he thought were lost forever. ✨
Thank you for taking the time to share such specific observations about the writing. It means the world to know these elements resonated with you! 💫
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You met your objective in your writing. Also, the premise was so different. Imaginative, yet completely believable.
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Congrats! What a wild ride of a story (in a good way). I loved it!
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Hi Meredith,
Thank you for the enthusiasm! 🤗 "Wild ride" is such a perfect description - I often felt the same way while writing it!
There was something unpredictable about following Jack and Ruby's journey. I started with these two characters who seemed so different on the surface, yet were both struggling with communication in their own ways. Watching them gradually find their path to each other revealed surprises I hadn't planned.
Sometimes stories take us places we never expected to go, don't they? Jack and Ruby certainly had their own ideas about where this narrative needed to travel. ✨
I'm so glad you enjoyed coming along for the ride! Thank you for taking the time to share your reaction.
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Everything in it was so dynamic from beginning to end! Wonderful job.
I love doing a lot with character development and flowery descriptions too. I would so appreciate it if you could read some of what I've written and give me feedback. I'm always open to constructive criticism and just general advice! :)
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Congratulations, Alex!
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Hi Manning,
Thank you so much for the congratulations! 🤗
It still feels a bit surreal to have "Unspoken Orders" recognized this way. Writing Jack and Ruby's story was one of those rare experiences where the characters seemed to take on lives of their own - I just tried to keep up and capture their journey as honestly as I could.
There's something magical about that moment when a story connects with readers, isn't there? It transforms the solitary act of writing into something shared. ✨
I appreciate you taking a moment to reach out!
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Alex, congratulations on the win. I didn't know whether this would have a pleasant ending; I was happy to see Jack find redemption (at least somewhat) in the end. Excellent work on the story.
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Hi Nikita,
Thank you for those thoughtful words! 😊 I really appreciate you mentioning the uncertainty about the ending - that tension was exactly what I was hoping readers would feel.
Life rarely gives us perfect resolutions, so I wanted Jack's redemption to feel earned but not complete. Those small steps toward healing often mean more than grand transformations, don't they? Jack still has a long way to go, but finding his way back to family feels like the beginning of something meaningful.
I'm fascinated by characters who exist in that gray space - neither villains nor heroes, but complicated people trying to find their way forward from difficult pasts. Jack's journey isn't finished by the end of the story, but perhaps the most important part has begun. ✨
Thank you for taking the time to share your reaction. It means a lot to know the story's emotional arc resonated with you! 💫
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This was an excellent story. I loved it!
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Hi Lady Coretta,
Thank you for those kind words! 🤗 What a lovely surprise to receive your enthusiastic response!
There was something special about writing Jack and Ruby's journey - watching these two very different people slowly find their way to understanding each other despite all the barriers between them.
I'm drawn to these stories of unexpected connections, where people who struggle to communicate somehow find their own language. Sometimes the strongest bonds form in the most unlikely circumstances, don't they? ✨
I appreciate you taking the time to read and share your thoughts. It truly means the world to know the story resonated with you!
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