Two Years After Mateo’s Coma, One Cookie Exposed A Family Secret-Ginny

The hospital called while the stove was still on.

That is the first thing I remember clearly.

Not the time.

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Not the traffic.

Not even the nurse’s full sentence.

Only the blue flame trembling under a pot of beans, the smell of garlic in the kitchen, and my hand closing around the phone as if I could crush the fear inside it.

“Mr. Gabriel Méndez,” the nurse said, “Mateo has opened his eyes. We need you to come immediately.”

For two years, I had lived for that sentence.

I had imagined it in the morning when I tied my shoes for work.

I had imagined it at red lights.

I had imagined it beside my son’s bed while the machines did the breathing that his small body could not do alone.

But when it finally came, I did not cheer.

I did not pray out loud.

I did not even turn off the stove.

I ran.

My keys were in my hand, and the metal teeth cut into my palm hard enough to leave marks, but I did not notice until later.

The drive from Tlaquepaque to the hospital should have been loud, but that afternoon, the city went silent.

Only one sentence stayed alive in my head.

Mateo has opened his eyes.

My son had been eight years old when he disappeared without leaving the room.

It happened on his birthday.

Laura and I had promised him something simple because money was tight and life had already become too careful.

Balloons in the living room.

Jell-O in little cups.

Sandwiches cut into triangles.

Fruit drinks sorted by color.

A Spiderman piñata hanging in the yard, twisting slowly whenever the afternoon breeze came over the wall.

There was one rule in our house that day, the same rule we had every day.

No peanuts.

No walnuts.

No almonds.

Nothing that could kill Mateo.

His allergy was not a habit or a preference or one of those things relatives roll their eyes about when they think a mother is being dramatic.

It was real, fast, and it had already sent us to emergency care once when he was five.

After that, Laura became the kind of mother who checked every package, every tray, every bakery bag, every friendly little gift wrapped in a napkin.

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