Small fingers.
White knuckles.
A touch she had been too afraid to give him until now.
The boy picked up the white cane and held it like evidence.
“She only uses it when your wife is watching.”
The father’s mouth opened.
No sound came out.
The SUV door clicked.
His wife stepped out.
Perfect hair.
Soft smile.
A cream handbag in one hand.
A face already prepared to explain everything away.
“What is going on?”
The girl immediately put the sunglasses back on.
That one movement broke the father more than any answer could have.
His voice shook.
“Take them off.”
His wife laughed softly.
“Don’t pressure her. You know bright light hurts her eyes.”
The boy snapped, “No, it doesn’t.”
The wife’s smile thinned.
“You again.”
The father looked at the boy.
“You know him?”
The girl whispered, “He lives next door.”
The boy looked down.
“My window faces her room.”
The wife stepped forward.
“Do not listen to him.”
But the boy was already pulling something from his pocket.
A folded drawing.
Crayon.
Messy.
A little girl standing at a window without sunglasses.
Looking at the sky.
The father took it.
On the bottom, in shaky handwriting, were the words:
I saw the moon but I’m not allowed to say.
His daughter began to cry silently.
The father looked at her.
“You drew this?”
She nodded once.
His wife reached for the paper.
He pulled it back.
For the first time, she looked afraid.
The boy’s voice cracked.
“She watches you leave every morning. She sees you wave. She waves back after you turn away.”
The father pressed one hand to his mouth.
Because every morning he had waved at a daughter he believed could not see him.
Every morning she had answered too late.
The wife hissed, “She was born fragile. I gave her structure.”
The girl whispered, “You gave me darkness.”
That sentence stopped the whole sidewalk.
Even the wind seemed to pause in the trees.
The father turned toward his wife.
“Why?”
She looked around at the clean lawns, the parked cars, the perfect neighborhood.
Then at him.
“Because when she was sick, you stayed.”
His face went pale.
“She wasn’t sick.”
“She needed you close.”
“No,” he said, voice breaking. “You needed control.”
The girl started shaking.
The boy stepped closer to her, protective and furious.
“She told her if she looked normal, you’d stop loving her.”
The father sank to one knee in front of his daughter.
Not touching her yet.
Waiting.
“I am so sorry.”
The girl lifted her sunglasses slowly and looked at him fully.
Really looked.