The Bench with the Missing Paint
3 mins read

The Bench with the Missing Paint

Told by me, Kelsey. I think I was seven.

They found me under the slide—the red one that squeaks when the wind hits it just right. I was trying to be invisible. It’s not the superhero kind, just the kind where if you stay really still and quiet, maybe the world forgets to be mean for a while.

The lady who found me smelled like clean laundry. Her shoes crunched in the gravel. She didn’t ask me what I was doing. Just sat down on the old bench with the peeling paint. That’s where Mama used to sit, back when she still liked me.

“You cold, sweetie?” she asked.

I didn’t answer. Talking costs too much when you’re scared.

But she didn’t seem to mind. She just waited. Most grown-ups don’t do that. They either yell, or walk off, or both. But she sat there like she had all the time in the world for a kid like me.

My hands were stuffed up in my sleeves—I lost my jacket three sleeps ago. It got snagged on the fence behind the gas station. I tried to get it back, but that fence bites. It already got me once.

“I brought peanut butter crackers,” she said. Still not looking straight at me. Like she could tell I was pretending not to be there.

My stomach growled. I hated it for betraying me.

She set the little pack of crackers on the bench beside her. “You can have ’em if you want. I don’t like the kind with cheese.”

That made me smile a little, but only inside.

When she looked up at the sky, I crawled over real slow—bug slow—and snatched them. They were warm from her pocket, but I didn’t care. I ate them fast, just in case she changed her mind. She didn’t.

When I finished licking the crumbs off my fingers, she said, “My name’s Miss Angie. I run the daycare just down the street.”

I didn’t tell her my name. But I kind of wanted to.

She didn’t ask. She just said, “You can come with me if you want. We’ve got juice boxes, coloring books. A bathroom that flushes right.”

I didn’t really believe in nice places anymore. But her voice felt safe—kind of like how Mama used to sound in dreams I don’t have much these days.

So I followed her.

She didn’t try to hold my hand, which was good. She just walked slow, like she knew I still needed to pretend for a little while.

The daycare had a rainbow painted on the door. Inside, it smelled like glue and graham crackers. A boy with glasses waved at me. I didn’t wave back, but I felt my mouth almost try.

Later, after some juice and a nap under a soft blanket that didn’t smell like trash, Miss Angie asked again, real gentle, “Can you tell me your name now?”

I stared down at my shoes—the ones with my toes poking out.

“It’s Kelsey,” I whispered.

She smiled like I’d just handed her a treasure.

And right then, I didn’t feel invisible anymore.

That was the day I got found. Not just picked up. Found.

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