An 11-Year-Old Was Left With $20. Her Mother Came Home To Police – olive

My mom went on a month-long trip and left me with only $20 when I was 11.

When she finally came home, she didn’t expect to find the police waiting at the door.

I didn’t understand that a person could make a choice that big and still look casual while doing it.

Image

Sarah looked casual that Thursday morning.

She wore jeans that still had the store crease down the front, a cream sweater she had bought for the trip, red nail polish, and sunglasses so oversized they made her look like someone trying to be photographed.

Our apartment hallway smelled like old carpet, burnt toast from the neighbor across the way, and the lemon cleaner the landlord only used when he wanted the building to seem better than it was.

Her two suitcases stood beside the door like they belonged to somebody else.

I was eleven, in my school hoodie, with my backpack hanging off one shoulder because she had told me the night before that I did not need to go to school the next morning.

“We’ll have mother-daughter time before I leave,” she had said.

I believed her because I was still young enough to believe promises that came with a smile.

We did not have mother-daughter time.

I watched her pack until midnight.

She folded dresses on the couch, packed makeup in a plastic travel bag, answered messages with her phone turned away from me, and laughed at videos while I sat on the floor pretending I cared about cartoons.

Every zipper sounded final.

Every time I asked a question, she answered like I had interrupted something more important than me.

“Are you really leaving me alone with just that?” I asked when she pressed the twenty-dollar bill into my hand.

It was wrinkled, warm from her palm, and folded twice.

Sarah didn’t look guilty.

She looked annoyed.

“There’s instant soup, peanut butter, bread, and canned beans,” she said. “Don’t be dramatic.”

“How many days?”

“A few weeks.”

“A few weeks is how many?”

She pulled the handle up on one suitcase and gave me that look adults give when they want a child to understand they are asking too much by asking anything at all.

“I got an opportunity, Emily. I deserve one good thing for once.”

I had heard that sentence before.

She said it when she bought clothes instead of paying the electric bill.

She said it when she left me with microwave dinners so she could go out with friends.

She said it whenever something she wanted had to become more important than something I needed.

This time, the good thing was Europe.

Spain.

Italy.

France.

The names sounded unreal to me, like pictures on a classroom wall.

I knew they were far away.

Read More