I wasn't always the youngest child. Even if we count my step-siblings, I'm still the youngest now. But I remember, I wasn't always the last. Once, I had a baby sister. I had a baby sister once. She was so small. So soft and so cold. I remember her smell, like something still half-made by heaven. She couldn't talk; she could only cry and stare into open spaces, her tiny eyes trying to make sense of this strange world. I loved holding her. I really did.
But sweet things never last long, do they?
And she was the sweetest of them all.
She was born on October 11. I remember that day like it's carved into me. My mother was crying. My father was trying to sound brave. I was just staring at her, this tiny wiggling thing fighting to live. The doctors had said she had auditory issues and a congenital heart disease. Everyone tried to take it lightly.
I remember my father saying, "Don't worry, love. With modern medicine, she'll live. Everything will be fine."
But my mother turned away, from him, from the baby, from all of it. As if hope itself was too heavy for her to hold.
That night was cold. Autumn air had that sharp edge to it, where days are sunny but nights bite. I remember looking at the baby, really looking, and she looked right back.
You might not believe this, but I swear she said my name.
"Sa… Sa…"
Then her tiny hand, so fragile it could break with a sigh, wrapped around my finger. Just for a second. Then she let go.
I ran to my father, clutching his pant leg, breathless.
"She said my name! The baby said my name!"
He shooed me away, told my older sister to take me out. She smiled at me like I was some foolish little boy.
"Yeah, sure," she said.
I cried as she pulled me down the hospital corridor.
"She really did! She wants me! She's scared!"
I broke free and stomped my foot on the floor.
"She said my name! She said, Sa… Sa… Sa!"
My sister sighed, throwing her hands up.
"Okay, okay, you win. She said your name. Now come on, let's go get ice cream."
It was the coldest, sweetest ice cream I've ever had in my life. I remember licking it slowly, watching it melt.
"It's sweet," I said.
"Hmm," she replied.
"Sweet things melt away, right?"
She nodded again. "Yeah. That's why you enjoy them fast. Otherwise, you'll lose them."
I didn't look at her. I just said quietly, "I'm going to play with the baby."
Her whole face changed. She grabbed my hand.
"Stop! Finish your ice cream first!"
"I want to play with her while I can. Otherwise, I'll lose her."
"What?" she said sharply.
"She's sweet. And she smells sweet. And she's cold. Just like this ice cream."
The rest I don't remember clearly. Only that before I could finish my words, something, someone, hit me. Hard. A slap so sharp it threw me off the stairs. I woke up later with my head wrapped in bandages.
My sister was sitting nearby. When I tried to sit up, she rushed to me and said, "You slipped from the stairs."
But I knew she was lying.
I could see it in her eyes.
And in the days that followed, my father's eyes confirmed it, the disgust, the poison in his look. As if I had brought the disease. As if my touch had cursed her.
She lived for only twenty days.
Twenty days!
I remember pumping her tiny chest, no my father didn't he was not at home. And not my mother she was too panicked. Nor my siblings they didn't know what to do. Only I knew by what I had seen in videos the past few days on how to resuscitate a little baby. My hands were shaking, my tears falling on her face. "Christie, don't leave me. Please. Don't leave me alone." It was a name I gave her. It was from the word crystal. Because they never really named her. But I did.
And then her lips turned pale. Cold as she always was, she went colder. Limp and Quiet. And the world fell into that kind of silence that never really ends.
They say people with warm hands are loyal. My hands were always warm.
But if I were loyal, I would have protected her.
I would have protected everything that belonged to her, our parents, our family, myself.
But I couldn't.
I just couldn't.
...................
The screech came again.
No. I didn't eat it. NOOO. Don't think gross things!!! come back to the point!!! ughh... even imagining it this reptile .... ewwwww....
Even with hunger clawing at me for two days, I couldn't eat something so absurd, so wrong. I was terrified of it, terrified that it would eat me instead, thinking I was already lying dead.
So I stood up on the bed, trembling, my body weak but my mind wild with fear. The sound crept closer. I didn't know why I was remembering her now, at the edge of death, but maybe this was it, my turn to melt away too.
It's strange what the mind does when death is near, it loops, rewinds, finds comfort in old wounds. I saw her face again. Her tiny lips trying to say my name. Her cold body and sweet smell, covering my feverish sweaty body in her embrace. it was the kind of cold you feel calm in, the sweetness you cannot get enough of.
Maybe it was her. …
Maybe it was just the hunger.
But I swear I heard it… soft as a sigh…
"Sa…"
And maybe this time, I'll answer her.
Sweet things don't last.
And I was never that sweet to begin with.
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