My husband told me our five-year-old fell off the swing while I was at work, and at first I believed him. But when my son wouldn’t let me see his left arm, I knew something was wrong. I just had no idea how wrong.
After lunch, I called my husband, Mark, to check and make sure our son, Leo, had eaten. Instead of answering right away, he went quiet, and in the background, I heard my son crying.
My heart started pounding. “Mark, what happened?”
“Elle, Leo… he fell,” he said. “From the swing.”
In the background, I heard my son crying.
Leo had stayed home that day because Mark took off work and promised him a fun father-son day in the backyard. Our son had been so excited that morning he put his shoes on by himself and asked twice whether they could do the swing first.
I ended the call, grabbed my keys, and drove straight home. When I got there, Leo was sitting on the couch with a bowl of crackers in his lap. His cheeks were streaked with dried tears.
Usually he came running when I walked in. That day, Leo barely looked up.
I dropped down beside him. “Baby, are you okay?”
He nodded too quickly. That scared me more.
I looked at Mark, who was leaning against the kitchen counter, and asked, “What happened?”
Usually he came running when I walked in.
“He fell off the swing. He’s five, Eleanor,” Mark replied. “Kids fall. Don’t turn this into a drama.”
The calmness in his voice made my skin prickle. It was not just what he said; It was how ready he was with it. And something about that readiness made me feel that I had not heard the real story yet.
Before I could ask more, Mark grabbed his gym bag. “Leo’s fine. I already checked him.”
“Then why was he crying?” I asked.
“Because he’s a kid and kids cry,” Mark was already moving toward the door. “Don’t make this bigger than it is.”
I just stood there listening to the front door close.
“Kids fall. Don’t turn this into a drama.”
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