"Apples
or Oranges?" asks the boy as his mother pushes him out the hospital using
his wheelchair.
"But I prefer kiwi over those
choices," replies the mother.
"Can't you just answer the
question right?" asks the boy, upset that his mother didn't answer how
he'd wanted.
"Don't you talk to me like
that, ever!" says the mother, putting her foot down at this unruly
behavior. "Everyone knows who the adult is here, so I suggest that you
behave," she continues with a slightly raised voice.
Fertility can possibly take the
blame here, because if women were unable to become pregnant, there wouldn't be
any ungrateful children in wheelchairs.
"Getting in the car is hard!"
complains the boy while in the hospital parking lot.
"Hard for who? It's hard for me, and only me." she says, still in stressed out mommy mode. "Just
sit down, okay?" she asks calmly after taking a deep breath, finally composing
herself.
Kids are, and always will be, a
handful. Leaving them in the parking lot and driving off isn't an option,
unfortunately. Must've been what the boy's mother had been thinking, prior to
the exaggerated inhale/exhale to keep calm.
"Never say never," the mother says as the boy keeps complaining
how he's never gonna walk again.
"Okay," he sighs, sounding
defeated.
"Poor thing," she thinks
to herself as she puts her child to bed.
Quietly, the mother walks out after
she's sure he's sleeping. Reality has crept up on this child; perhaps for the
first time in his young life. Such a sad situation to say the least. Togetherness
is crucial in times like these. Unreliability, especially as a parent, is not an option.
"Very interesting," the
mother says as the boy shows her his latest class drawing.
"When is dad coming home?"
he asks, unaware of his father picking up and leaving the city.
Xenophobia might have been one of the
reasons for his father's abandonment, being born and raised in small town
America.
"You ask too many questions,
you know that?" she asks rhetorically, knowing her son's attention span
isn't the best, as she realizes he's daydreaming.
Zoning out probably lets the boy
imagine being able to walk again, to deal with a broken family, something that
has become more common than people give it credit for.
I enjoyed your abc story. It was realistic and I can tell that the whole family have there own little problems. It the story were to go on I would wish that everyone found a solution
ReplyDeleteI liked it too, Tysean. You pull off a beginning, middle, and end, so that I almost forgot the constraint.
ReplyDelete