The Crooked Signature That Saved A Little Girl In Connecticut-tantan

The first thing Hannah noticed about the boarding school office was the smell.

It smelled like floor polish, printer paper, and the bitter coffee adults drank when they were pretending not to be tired.

The second thing she noticed was the little American flag on the principal’s desk.

Image

It leaned in a small brass holder beside a stack of folders, bright and still under the fluorescent lights, like it belonged there more than Hannah did.

She was 8 years old, wearing a sweater that itched around the wrists and shoes that squeaked every time she shifted her weight.

Beside her sat one small purple suitcase.

Her stepmother had packed it before breakfast.

Not with Hannah’s favorite pajamas.

Not with her stuffed rabbit.

Not with the blue hoodie her dad let her borrow when the house got cold.

Just clothes, socks, a toothbrush, and the kind of neat folded outfits adults choose when they want a child to look cared for in front of strangers.

Hannah had asked where they were going.

Her stepmother had said, “Somewhere that can help you settle down.”

Hannah had asked if her dad knew.

Her stepmother had said, “Your father already signed everything.”

That was the sentence Hannah kept turning over in her head as they sat across from the principal.

Her father had not sounded like a man sending her away that morning.

He had been rushing, like always, his work boots thumping near the back door, his lunch cooler in one hand and Hannah’s school lunch in the other.

He had kissed the top of her head.

He had reminded her to give her spelling list to him after dinner.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *