Grandma Called 911 While The Stepmom Kept Playing Her Game On The Couch-heyily

The living room still smelled like apple juice and lemon cleaner when Emma fell.

It was the kind of ordinary Sunday smell that should have disappeared into the background, the kind of smell a grandmother notices only because she has wiped the coffee table twice and told herself the house looks good enough for a family evening.

The late sun came through the blinds in pale gold stripes, landing across the carpet, the couch cushions, and the little pile of plastic blocks Emma had spread near the coffee table.

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She was four years old, wearing purple socks, and humming to herself in that soft tuneless way children do when they are busy building something that matters to them.

Every block clicked into place with a tiny careful tap.

One second, she was making a tower.

The next, her body went stiff.

Her left arm snapped tight against her side, her knees jerked, and she dropped to the carpet with a thud that sounded wrong before anyone said a word.

It was not the sound of a child tripping.

It was not the sound of a toy falling.

It was the kind of dull, final sound that makes an older woman’s bones understand danger before her mind can catch up.

“Emma!” I shouted.

The blocks scattered under the couch.

Foam gathered at the corner of her mouth, and her eyes rolled back until I could see mostly white.

Her small fingers clawed at the air like she was trying to hold on to something none of us could see.

I dropped to my knees so hard my hip screamed.

There are pains you notice and pains you save for later, and that one had to wait.

I turned Emma gently onto her side the way a school nurse had once taught us during a safety night at the elementary school.

I could still remember the nurse standing in a cafeteria full of folding chairs, telling parents and grandparents not to put anything in a child’s mouth, not to shake them, not to panic so badly that you became useless.

At the time, it had seemed like one of those community things people attend because the school sends a flyer home.

In that living room, it became the only useful thing I knew.

I held Emma’s shoulder and looked over mine.

“Kayla, call 911!”

My son’s wife was sitting on the couch with a gaming controller in both hands.

She did not stand up.

She did not gasp.

She did not even pause the game.

The television flashed blue and white across her face while her thumbs moved fast over the buttons.

“She’ll be fine,” Kayla muttered.

I stared at her, because there are sentences the human mind refuses to accept at first.

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