A Little Girl Asked If She Could Eat. Then Her Uncle Found the List-olive

My name is Robert, and for most of my adult life, I thought I was the practical one in my family.

Paula was the emotional one, the one who rushed into relationships, jobs, apartments, plans, and apologies.

I was the one who read leases before signing them, kept spare batteries in kitchen drawers, paid bills before the due date, and called ahead before showing up anywhere.

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That was the version of myself I trusted.

Then my sister left her five-year-old daughter with me for three days, and I learned there are kinds of danger that do not look like danger until a child asks permission to eat.

Paula and I had grown up in Austin, Texas, in a house where food was never treated like a reward.

Our mother made too much of everything.

Too much rice.

Too much stew.

Too many tortillas wrapped in foil because she believed nobody should leave a kitchen with an empty stomach.

Paula used to laugh about it.

She used to say Mom could turn one pound of beef into dinner for twelve people and still send three containers home with the neighbors.

So when Paula called and asked me to watch Ruby for three days while she went to Dallas for a business trip, I did not think twice.

Ruby had stayed with me before, but never without Paula.

She was a quiet little girl with enormous eyes, a soft voice, and a way of carrying her doll under one arm as if the doll had a schedule to keep.

She liked cartoons with talking animals.

She liked rice mixed into soup.

She liked the color purple because, according to her, purple was what happened when red and blue decided not to fight.

I should have noticed more.

That is the sentence that still follows me.

I should have noticed more.

Paula had been dating Sergio for about eight months by then.

He was charming in the way men become charming when they know charm is a door opener.

He brought flowers to family gatherings.

He remembered people’s coffee orders.

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