His Smile Looked Like His Mother, So His Father Made Him Apologize-tantan

Leo learned to swallow a smile before most children learn to spell apology.

He was eight, small for his age, with sleeves that always slid over his hands and hair that fell into his eyes when he bent over his worksheets.

In his Denver elementary school, he was the kind of child teachers remembered for quiet reasons.

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He put caps back on markers.

He pushed in chairs that were not his.

He once spent ten minutes in the hallway convincing a younger student that the cafeteria door was not as heavy as it looked.

At the beginning of the year, Mrs. Carter thought he was simply shy.

He smiled with his lips closed, but his eyes gave him away.

When the class pet chewed through a cardboard tube, he laughed so hard he covered his face.

When music came on during cleanup, he hummed without noticing.

When the art teacher told the class to draw their families, Leo drew himself between two grown-ups, then folded the paper before anyone could see.

By late September, something had changed.

He stopped humming first.

Then he stopped joining songs.

Then he stopped looking into anything that showed his reflection.

Mrs. Carter noticed the window thing on a Friday afternoon.

The classroom had gone golden with late sunlight, and the glass beside the reading corner had turned into a soft mirror.

Leo sat with his back twisted away from it, his shoulders tight, even though the rest of his table was facing the board.

“Your neck is going to hurt like that,” Mrs. Carter said gently.

Leo did not turn.

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