“A bed,” I said, and something broke open in my chest when I said it, the kind of break that does not hurt so much as release, and I pressed my fist against my mouth so the sound of it would not wake him. “Just one bed where he won’t wake up cold.”
She asked my name twice. Not because she had forgotten it the first time. Because she wanted me to hear myself said back by someone who was paying attention.“Okay, Ava,” she said. “Stay on the line with me.”
Nobody came with sirens. The knock at our door was careful, the kind that understood our door had been slammed too many times by life already to need any additional force. A woman named Denise came in first, wearing jeans and a county badge, and she kneeled down so her face was at my level before she said anything else. A retired paramedic came in behind her carrying two folded blankets and a paper bag that smelled like peanut butter crackers. A church volunteer from down the road brought a lamp with a yellow shade that changed the quality of the room’s air the moment it came on.
Denise looked at Noah’s red hands and said poor buddy is freezing, and she said it the way a person says something true rather than the way a person says something to demonstrate their own empathy. The paramedic took his boots off at the door without being asked. He checked the heater, tightened something with a pocket tool, and got it running again, not dramatically, just patiently, the way you treat a thing that needs someone to listen to what it actually requires. Denise saw my sketchbook open on the table and asked what I drew. I told her houses, the kind with warm windows, the kind where people stay. She nodded the way you nod when someone has told you the truth about something larger than themselves.
Before they left, they had given us blankets, groceries, a small space heater that hummed steadily, and a note stuck to the refrigerator with blue tape. It said: You are still a child. You do not have to earn rest.