Every Morning, A Seven-Year-Old Drank Park Water Before School-tantan

At 7:18 on a gray Atlanta morning, the water fountain in the park clicked, rattled, and pushed out a thin silver stream.

Lily lifted herself onto her toes, pressed both palms against the cold metal button, and drank like the water might disappear if she paused.

She was seven years old, with a purple school jacket zipped crooked and a backpack too big for her shoulders.

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The park was already awake around her.

Cars moved along the curb in a steady rush.

A yellow school bus sighed at the next corner.

A woman pushed a stroller past the benches, and a man with a paper coffee cup tucked his chin into his collar against the morning chill.

Nobody looked twice at a little girl using a public fountain.

That was why Lily chose it.

She did not splash her hands or giggle into the stream.

She leaned in close, swallowed fast, wiped her mouth on the stretched cuff of her sleeve, and checked the sidewalk behind her before she stepped away.

The street artist noticed on the first Monday, but he told himself not to make it into a story too quickly.

He had been setting up near that walking path for three weeks with a folding stool, a scuffed canvas board, and a coffee can full of brushes.

He painted pets from phone photos, skyline sketches for tourists, quick portraits for kids whose parents wanted something better than a selfie.

He had learned that parks carried every kind of morning.

Sleepy parents, joggers, teenagers, men in work boots, women in scrubs, old couples walking slowly because they had nowhere urgent to be.

A child drinking water before school did not have to mean anything.

But Lily came back Tuesday.

She came back Wednesday.

She came back Thursday, each time around the same minute, each time with that same tight look on her face.

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