They Mocked The Sick Boy They Abandoned—Then He Walked Into The Store-Tep

I opened the front door on a Tuesday evening and knew something had gone wrong before I saw the papers.

The house had the wrong kind of quiet.

No TV murmured from the living room, no pan rattled on the stove, and no garlic or pasta sauce warmed the kitchen the way it usually did when my sister Sharon came by.

Image

The hallway air felt cold against my face, and the little light above the stove had been left off.

Then I saw Kyle curled in my armchair.

He was five years old, clutching one of my throw pillows so hard his fingers had gone white.

His cheeks looked hollow, his hair stuck up on one side, and his eyes had a careful wetness no child should know.

“Aunt Melissa,” he whispered, “Mommy said you’d know what to do.”

My purse slid off my shoulder and hit the floor.

On the kitchen counter were three things, placed so neatly they looked staged.

A crumpled note.

A stack of divorce papers.

Keith’s wedding ring.

Sharon’s handwriting looped across the note like she was asking me to water a plant.

Keith and I are in love. We’re starting over. Kyle needs stability, and you always wanted to help. Please don’t make this harder than it has to be.

Under the note, Keith had signed every divorce page.

Every date was filled in.

Every signature was neat.

Nothing about it had been sudden.

My sister had run away with my husband, and they had left her sick little boy in my living room like a package neither of them wanted to carry.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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