The Babysitter Who Saved My Family Hid One Final Deed From Me-thuyhien

The first time Lucy came to my house, I was sure she was going to be a disaster.

She was sixteen, late, soaked from the rain, and wearing two different shoes.

One was black.

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One was faded blue.

Her hair was tied back with a purple hair tie that looked like it had lost a fight with the weather, and her backpack had a torn strap she held in one hand like it might give up if she trusted it too much.

I opened the door with Sophie on my hip, Valerie yelling from the kitchen table, and cereal scattered across the couch because my middle daughter had decided bowls were optional.

The house smelled like baby formula, wet carpet, and something burning in the toaster.

Lucy blinked at all of it and said she was sorry.

I did not even know where to start.

I asked if she was the babysitter.

She said yes, then gave me a smile that was too hopeful for how badly things were already going.

She said she learned fast.

I should have said no.

I should have thanked her for coming, closed the door, and called one of the other mothers from school to ask if she knew anyone who could watch three girls without burning down the neighborhood.

Instead, I looked over my shoulder at my own house falling apart and let her in.

Raul was working long days then.

My mother had helped for years, but her knees had gotten worse, and by that point even our porch steps looked like a mountain to her.

I was tired in the way mothers do not admit to being tired.

Not sleepy.

Not overwhelmed for an afternoon.

Bone tired.

The kind of tired where you start crying because the milk expired and it feels like the last proof that you are failing at life.

Lucy walked into that chaos with wet sleeves and mismatched shoes, and within five minutes she spilled water across the kitchen table.

At ten minutes, she burned a quesadilla.

At fifteen, Sophie had climbed into her lap and was showing her a headless doll with the grave seriousness of a surgeon presenting a case.

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