At My Son’s Birthday, One Broken Toy Tore Our Family Apart-lbsuong

The first thing Jessica broke was the dinosaur.

It should have been too small to matter to anyone but Jacob.

It was a green plastic T. rex from Target, the kind with a red button under its belly and a roar that sounded like it came through a cheap speaker in a fast-food toy.

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Jacob had picked it out three weeks before his seventh birthday.

He had carried it through two aisles, pressing the button softly so it would not bother anyone, then he looked at me checking prices on cereal and quietly put it back.

He never asked for it again.

That was how my son had learned to want things.

Carefully.

Quietly.

With one eye on my face.

So after work the next day, I went back to Target with sore feet and a grocery list I had already crossed in half, and I bought the dinosaur anyway.

I kept the receipt folded in my purse.

I wrapped the box after Jacob fell asleep, sitting at my kitchen table under the buzzing light over the sink.

The apartment was hot, and the paper kept sticking to my wrist.

Blue paper.

Crooked silver stars.

One strip of tape that wrinkled because I was too tired to start over.

Beside it, I wrapped a watercolor set, a book about space, and a beginner telescope I found on clearance.

My father had made him a wooden puzzle in his garage.

Every piece had been sanded smooth by hand, and when Dad gave it to me the week before, he rubbed his thumb over the corner and said, “No splinters for my boy.”

That was Dad.

He did not make speeches when he loved you.

He fixed the loose railing.

He showed up with jumper cables.

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