A Girl, Two Hungry Babies, and the Trust Her Uncle Tried to Hide-paupau

My name is Hannah Parker, and for a long time I remembered that July afternoon by temperature before I remembered it by words.

The concrete was hot enough to sting through the skin of my bare feet.

Noah’s forehead burned against my neck.

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Mason’s carrier handle felt slick in my palm because my hands were sweating so badly I could barely hold on.

I was eight years old, which is old enough to understand fear but not old enough to have a name for what adults call financial abuse.

At that age, I still thought families became safer after funerals because everyone spoke more softly.

I was wrong.

Three months before Uncle Victor told us to get out, my parents died on Interstate 55 just outside Indianapolis.

People said the accident was instant, as if that word was supposed to be merciful.

There is no instant version of losing both parents when you are eight and your brothers are six months old.

There are only rooms that keep their furniture and stop making sense.

There are baby bottles in a sink no one can bear to wash.

There are adults whispering in hallways and pretending children do not understand the words custody, estate, insurance, and trust.

At the funeral, Uncle Victor stood near the front and cried with one hand over his mouth.

He hugged people hard.

He told every neighbor, cousin, and friend that he would take us in because “family steps up.”

Everyone believed him.

I believed him too.

He was my father’s older brother, and before the accident he had been the uncle who brought loud birthday cards, cheap magic tricks, and a cooler full of soda to summer parties.

Cheryl, his wife, had always smelled like lemon hand cream and hairspray.

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