The Boston Teacher Who Noticed a Little Girl Erasing Herself-tantan

Every Friday morning, Ava sat in the same corner of Mrs. Harper’s art classroom beside the windows that rattled whenever the October wind pushed against the old brick school building.

The room always smelled faintly like crayons, washable paint, and cafeteria pizza drifting down the hallway before lunch.

Most nine-year-olds treated art class like recess with markers.

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They talked too loud.

They traded stickers.

They laughed when somebody spilled water on construction paper.

Ava never did.

She worked quietly with the sleeves of her oversized gray hoodie pulled over her hands, her blonde hair hanging partly over her face while she sketched carefully inside the same spiral-bound drawing pad every single week.

Mrs. Harper noticed her because she never rushed.

Children usually scribble first and think later.

Ava thought before every line.

At first, Mrs. Harper assumed she was just shy.

There were plenty of shy children in fourth grade.

Boston winters made kids retreat into themselves sometimes.

Divorce did too.

And according to Ava’s emergency contact forms sitting in the school office, her parents had separated years earlier.

Nothing unusual there.

Half the children in the district came from split households.

But by mid-October, Mrs. Harper realized something about Ava’s drawings she could no longer ignore.

Every assignment somehow became the same picture.

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