I woke up in a soft bed — Spider-Man blankets, sunlight on my face, and quiet. Real quiet.
Mrs. Ramirez told me Mom was healing, and we’d stay with a lady named Denise for a while. When we got there, Denise stood on the porch of a blue house with yellow flowers. “Hi, Theo. Hi, Amelie. I’m so glad you’re here.”
The house smelled like cinnamon and bread. It felt… safe. She showed me our room — one crib, one superhero bed.
“This room is yours for as long as you need it,” she said.
That first night, I wedged a chair under the door — just like Mom taught me. Denise didn’t get mad. She just sat with me on the floor. “You’re both safe here,” she whispered.
Days turned into weeks. Amelie giggled again. I learned how to sleep without the chair. Every night, I called the hospital. “She’s resting,” the nurse said. Then one night — “She’s awake. She’s asking about you.”
When Mom finally came to see us, she looked different — softer, smaller, but real. I ran into her arms. She cried. “My hero,” she said.
Denise stood in the doorway, smiling. Later, she told me quietly, “Your mom’s doing the hard work now. I’m just helping — like someone once helped me.”
Months later, Mom got a new apartment. We moved in together — not to the old place, but somewhere new. Quiet. Bright. Safe.
Sometimes we still visit Denise on Sundays. She makes cinnamon rolls, and Amelie runs straight to her arms.
I’m older now. But I’ll never forget that night — the cold, the running, the fear.
I learned that monsters are real. But heroes are, too.
Sometimes they’re nurses, doctors, social workers.
And sometimes… they’re a seven-year-old kid who refuses to stop running.
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