My Nephew’s Black Gloves Hid The Truth That Shattered Our Summer-heuh

My nephew came to stay with me for the entire summer, and from the first morning in our house, he wore black gloves.

Every single day.

Inside, outside, at the kitchen table, on the sofa, even when the house was too warm and the rest of us were opening windows to catch a bit of air.

Image

When I finally asked him about them, he gave me a small, careful smile and said, “Uncle… my hands are just sensitive.”

I wanted to believe him.

Adults are very good at believing the answer that asks the least of them.

Nate arrived on the first Saturday in June, when the street outside our house was damp from an early shower and the bricks still held the heat of the morning.

Lila had been wiping down the kitchen counter with a tea towel, stopping every few minutes to look through the front window.

I had put fresh bedding in the small room at the back, cleared one drawer, and told myself that none of this had to be perfect.

It just had to be safe.

His father’s car drew up just after lunch.

Nate climbed out slowly, one backpack over his shoulder, a duffel bag dragging against his leg, and black gloves pulled tight over both hands.

They were not winter gloves.

They were not the cheap knitted sort a child forgets in a school corridor.

They were black, smooth, and deliberate, fitted in a way that made them impossible not to notice.

I noticed them before I noticed anything else.

Before his narrow shoulders.

Before the way his eyes flicked towards our windows.

Before the way he paused on the pavement as if waiting for someone to tell him he had done something wrong.

“Nate,” I said, stepping forward and hugging him.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *