An Eleven-Year-Old Was Left Alone for a Month. Then Police Came.-olive

My mom went to Europe for a month when I was eleven, leaving me with just twenty dollars in my hand as if that were enough.

When she finally returned, she never imagined that the police would be waiting for her.

The morning she left, our apartment smelled like sweet perfume, cold toast crumbs, and lemon cleaner.

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That was how I knew she wanted the place to look better than it was.

My mother only cleaned like that when somebody might notice.

The counters had been wiped down, but the trash still smelled sour under the sink.

The couch pillows were straight, but the laundry basket in the hallway was overflowing.

Her suitcase wheels clicked over the tile with a bright little sound that did not belong in our apartment.

It was too cheerful.

Too planned.

Too final.

I stood near the door with my backpack still on my shoulders because she had told me we were leaving early.

I thought she meant school.

I thought maybe she was driving me somewhere before class.

The day before, she had signed me out of school early and told my teacher we were having special time together before her trip.

Mrs. Delgado had smiled when my mother said it.

I had smiled too.

Children will believe almost anything if believing it means their parent might choose them.

But there had been no special time.

There had only been my mother’s bedroom door half open, two suitcases on the bed, and a passport lying on the dresser like it was more important than anything breathing in the apartment.

She repainted one smudged fingernail while I stood there asking what I should do if I got scared.

“In your bed, Tessa,” she said. “Where else?”

She said it like fear was bad manners.

By morning, she was dressed in a new coat.

Her nails were perfect.

Her perfume floated through the apartment every time she moved, sweet and sharp enough to make my throat itch.

She pulled folded bills from her purse and put them into my hand.

One twenty.

A few wrinkled fives.

I remember staring at them because money looked different in my hand.

In grown-up hands, money looked useful.

In mine, it looked like something I could lose.

“What am I supposed to eat?” I asked.

My mother’s mouth tightened.

Not with worry.

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