The Little Girl, The Biker On The Bench, And The Photo That Froze The Park-myhoa

At first, I thought I was being careful.

That is what I told myself when I pulled Emma closer to me at the playground that Saturday morning.

Careful mothers notice things.

Image

Careful mothers count exits.

Careful mothers know where their children are, who is standing too close, whose hands are empty, whose pockets are too full, whose eyes keep moving instead of resting where normal eyes should rest.

At least, that was the story I had built for myself over five years of raising a daughter in a world that can make even a sunny playground feel like a test.

The park was busy that morning.

The swing chains squeaked in that tired metal rhythm that always sounds like childhood from far away and a headache when you are standing under it.

Fresh-cut grass blew in from the open field beyond the playground fence.

The sun was bright enough to make the slide glare white at the edges, and the wood chips had that dry, dusty smell that clings to sneakers and car mats all afternoon.

Emma had a little pack of fruit snacks from my purse.

It was the last one, found under a receipt and a half-used tube of lip balm, and she carried it like I had handed her a jewel.

She ate the purple first.

Then the orange.

Then the yellow, even though she made a face because yellow was never her favorite.

She saved the red one.

Emma always saved the red one.

She was five, nearly old enough to tell me she was not a baby, still young enough to believe a scraped knee could be fixed by a kiss and a Band-Aid with cartoon animals on it.

Her blonde pigtails were uneven because she had turned her head right as I tied the second one that morning.

There was sunscreen on the bridge of her nose.

Her pink sneakers were already dusty from running under the monkey bars.

I was watching her climb the little ladder when the mood of the park changed.

It did not happen all at once.

One mother stopped pushing a stroller.

A father near the slide shifted his toddler from one hip to the other and looked over his shoulder.

Two older boys who had been fighting over a plastic shovel suddenly got quiet.

Then I saw what everyone else had seen.

A man was sitting alone on the bench beneath the maple tree.

He was huge in the way some men are huge without trying, broad through the shoulders, thick arms, heavy boots planted apart in the wood chips.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *