Cut
asthma?”
    Your voice startles me. I’d almost forgotten you were there.
    “What?”
    “When did Sam develop asthma?”
    I jump, the way I always did at a track meet when the ref would cock the starting gun and yell, “On your mark.”
    “Callie?”
    My thigh muscles are twitching, my feet are sweating. I press my hands to my thigh legs to still them. It’s no good. “A year ago, maybe a little more.” I try to sound casual, bored even.
    “A year ago,” you repeat.
    I slide forward on the couch, ready to go.
    “And while your parents were at the hospital, who took care of you?”
    I’m sitting on the edge of the couch now. “I take care of myself.”
    You uncross your legs, cap your pen, and say I did good work. I check the clock. Our time was up five minutes ago.
    On the way back from your office I pass the dayroom. The TV voice of a talk-show host competes with the tick-tock of a Ping-Pong game. I tuck my head down and slink by. As I pass the door, a tiny white ball skitters out into the hallway and rolls to a stop at my feet.
    “Hey, S.T.,” Sydney calls out. “Bring it here, will you?”
    I consider the ball at my feet, then Sydney’s flushed, happy face.
    “Please?” She smiles a wide smile.
    I bend and pick it up. It’s like picking up air, it’s so light. I take baby steps across the hall, then into the day-room, eyeing the ball every second, watching it wobble back and forth in my open palm, waiting for it to fall out of my hand and bounce down the hall, out the front door.
    Sydney plucks the ball out of my hand. “Thanks,” she says over her shoulder.
    My palm is suddenly empty. I don’t know what I’m supposed to do next.
    Sydney notices. “Wanna play?” She holds out her paddle.
    I scan the room. Debbie and Becca are sitting on the armchair, Debbie in the chair, Becca perched on the arm. Tiffany’s at the other end of the table, holding a paddle, still wearing her purse. Tara’s standing by the chalkboard, keeping score.
    “You can just watch if you want,” says Sydney. She gestures to an empty chair.
    “Please,” says Tara
    Walking across the room to the empty chair seems like it would take a lot of steps. The door is much closer. I shake my head and turn to go, knowing, even as I walk away, that I was wrong. Getting to the door takes forever.
    “Where would you like to start today?” you say.
    I consider. “With Sam. Could we talk about Sam some more?”
    “Sure.”
    But I can’t think of what to say about Sam.
    “Did I tell you about his hockey cards?”
    You shake your head.
    “He has this huge collection of cards. He gets a new pack whenever he gets sick. He loves those cards. He sorts them into piles all the time.”
    You don’t say anything.
    “According to teams or positions or statistics or whatever.”
    You don’t move. I trace a triangle on the couch.
    “My mom sits there with him after school. At the breakfast nook. She tats.”
    You tilt your head to the side. “Tats?”
    I stop tracing. “Tatting. It’s where you make lacy things like doilies and angels and things out of string. She tats and he sorts.”
    Telling you about my mom and Sam at home in the breakfast nook feels wrong somehow, private.
    “They have to take it easy,” I explain. “They have to rest a lot.”
    “What do you do?”
    “What do I do?”
    “While your mother tats and your brother sorts, what do you do?”
    “Oh.” I trace and retrace the triangle, stop, then start again. “Nothing. Watch TV.”
    You wait for me to say more.
    “I keep it on mute if they’re resting.”
    You wrinkle your brow.
    “I can read the captions if my mom and Sam are resting.”
    “You watch the TV on mute?”
    “I’m good at it.”
    You shake your head slightly. “I don’t understand, exactly.”
    I picture the big soundless TV in our family room, subtitles scrolling by at the foot of the screen. “The words at the bottom, they’re always a few seconds behind what the people on TV are

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