The ER Nurse Saw My Son Standing and Asked the Question I Feared-congtien

My son used to run when he saw me.

That is the detail I keep coming back to, even after the forms, the photos, the court dates, and the careful voices adults use when they are trying not to say the word they are all thinking.

Elliot was nine, and on the good weekends he hit my apartment door like a little storm.

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Backpack first.

Sneakers squeaking.

One hand already digging for the baseball cards he wanted to show me before I had even said hello.

He talked about everything then.

Cartoons.

Science videos.

The kid in his class who could burp the alphabet.

The old rock station I played in my truck even though Elliot only knew every third line and made up the rest with complete confidence.

On Sunday evenings, when Melanie came to pick him up, he always tried to bargain for more time.

One more slice of pepperoni pizza.

One more inning.

One more song before the parking lot.

Then the divorce settled into the kind of routine people congratulate themselves for surviving.

Every other weekend.

School breaks split on paper.

Family court hallway conversations where nobody looked happy, but everyone pretended the schedule was the same thing as peace.

Melanie was good at pretending.

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