LOGINMom said I needed to toughen up, so she made me walk home alone. "You're ten. Everyone else can do it. Why can't you? If you were even half as capable as your cousin, I wouldn't have to worry so much." I shook my head and signed, [I can't hear. Crossing streets isn't safe.] She gave me that look. Total disappointment. Then she walked off with my cousin, Sadie. What Mom didn't know was that before school let out, Sadie had stopped me. Said she was helping Mom make me independent. Then she snatched my hearing aid. Now the whole world was silent. I followed the crowd down the sidewalk. At a small intersection, a car spun out, horn blaring. Everyone scattered. Everyone but me. I couldn't hear it. My spirit rose above the street. Below, my body lay in a pool of blood. Mom... Sorry. I couldn't do this independence thing.
View MoreBy spring, Mom barely recognized anyone.Every day, she sat on the couch, holding my school jacket and talking to nothing."Vienna, dinner's ready.""Vienna, time for homework.""Vienna, I got you a new sketchbook."Her hair had gone completely gray.Sometimes she snapped out of it.She'd get up, walk to my room, and push the door open.The room was empty.The bed was still there.The desk was still there.But everything else was gone.No sketchbook.No backpack.No me.Mom stood in the doorway, staring into the empty room for a long time.Then she slowly shut the door, went back to the couch, and held my school jacket again.Her eyes were dry, but her lips kept moving.She kept saying my name."Vienna.""Vienna.""Vienna."I floated beside her and reached out one last time for her hair.This time, somehow, she felt something.She looked up at the empty space in front of her. Her eyes lit up."Vienna?"I didn't answer.My soul grew lighter.I knew it was tim
She just lay there, eyes open, staring at the ceiling.On the third day, she finally got up.She went to my room and pushed open the door.Everything looked exactly the same.The desk drawer was still open. Pieces of my sketchbook covered the floor.My bed was still unmade, the pillow dented where my head had been that morning.She crouched down and started picking up the pieces.One by one.She spread the torn pages across the desk and pieced them together like a puzzle.Some scraps were so tiny she had to use tweezers, fumbling each one into place.Every time she finished a page, she taped the back with clear tape.She spent three days putting it back together. No sleep. No breaks.Her tears hit the paper, smearing the scarf on one snowman."Vienna drew so well," she whispered.Her voice barely made a sound.I floated behind her, staring at her hunched back.Her hair had gone white in just a few days. Before, there were only a few gray strands. Now both temples were w
"It's... Vienna's hearing aid...""Why is it in your backpack?" Mom cried. "Why is Vienna's hearing aid in your backpack? Answer me!""I was just doing what you said..." Sadie's voice shook. "You said Vienna needed to be independent. I thought if she walked home alone... even without it... she'd learn."Mom went still."So you took her hearing aid?" Her voice dropped to a whisper. "And sent her across the street alone?""I was only trying to help—""Help?" Mom's voice went shrill. "How did you help her? You helped her die?"She slammed the hearing aid onto the desk, rushed over, grabbed Sadie's shoulders, and shook her hard."Who told you to take it off? Who told you to touch her hearing aid? Without it, she couldn't hear anything! How was she supposed to get home alone? How was she supposed to cross the street? That car was honking, and she couldn't hear it! She wasn't ignoring it—she couldn't hear it!"Sadie's head hit the headboard with a loud thud. Tears filled her eyes.
Mom's lips shook before she finally forced it out."She had a fever all night, and we didn't get her to a doctor in time—""A fever? What fever? Why did she have a fever?"Mom went silent."Answer me!""She was being stubborn!" Mom's voice climbed, like she'd finally found an excuse. "She had a fever and didn't say a word. Burned up all night, and I didn't know until morning. She was always like that. Keeping everything to herself, just like—"A sharp slap cracked across her face.The room went dead quiet.Dad's hand hung in the air, shaking hard.Tears and snot ran down his face, grief twisting every feature."You pushed her too hard. That's why she was scared to tell you she had a fever. You think I don't know you? You think I don't know my own daughter?""That's a lie!" Mom screamed. She lunged at him, pounding his chest. "How can you blame me? You left! You walked out and left me with everything! I raised her. Me! Did you ever take care of her? Even one day?"They start






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