A Little Girl Refused One Cookie. Then Her Neighbor Brought Pie-Teptep

This evening, Vivian and our neighbor’s kid almost turned our living room into a pay-per-view wrestling event over one cookie.

One cookie.

Not a birthday cake.

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Not a stolen lunch.

Not the last slice of pizza during a power outage.

A cookie.

I was on the couch, pressing my phone like any tired mother trying to borrow five quiet minutes from a noisy house.

The cartoon was playing too loud on the TV.

The air still smelled like butter cookies and that warm dust smell that comes from the heater kicking on too many times in one evening.

Vivian was on the living room rug, sitting cross-legged with her little pack of cookies in her lap like she had signed closing papers on the whole snack industry.

She was eating slowly.

That was the first warning sign.

Children only eat slowly when they are either guilty, sleepy, or enjoying something they do not intend to share.

Vivian was not sleepy.

She held each cookie with two fingers, took small bites, and watched cartoons with the calm satisfaction of a retired woman on a porch.

Outside, I could hear a car door shut somewhere in the driveway next door.

A minute later, our neighbor’s son came into our house.

He is one of those children adults love immediately because he has the manners of a tiny customer service representative.

He greeted everyone.

He took off his shoes.

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