Iâm going to have a lot of bruises. My mom is there. A doctor is telling her to keep an eye on me because itâs possible I have a concussion. A nurse gives her a sheet of paper that lists what my mom should look out for and what she should do if anything on the sheet happens.
Then there are cops in the room, only this time they introduce themselves as detectives. They want to ask me about âthe incident.â Theyâre super friendly. They ask how Iâm feeling. They tell me itâs a good thing I was wearing a helmet and that Iâd be surprised how many times they see people who arenât and what happens to them when their heads hit the concrete.
Thatâs when I start to shake all over, because all of a sudden Iâm remembering Stassiâs head, which also hit the pavement. I saw it. I saw her eyes closed. I saw the pool of blood under her. I hope sheâs okay. I hope it looks worse than it really is.
The cops ask me to tell them what I remember. Iâm just getting started when my dad rushes into the cubicle.
âI heard what happened,â he says to my mom. Heâs gasping for breath. He must have run in from the parking lot. âIs heâ?â His eyes find me. He looks me over and relaxes. âKenzie, are you okay?â
âThe doctor says heâs fine,â my mom assures him. âThese detectives need to ask him some questions.â
âDetectives?â My dad frowns. âI was told it was an accident.â
âWe need to get everything straight,â one of the cops says. I notice he doesnât agree with my dad. But he doesnât say heâs wrong either.
My mom puts a hand on my dadâs arm. My dad nods at the cops.
âOkay,â he says.
âDo you remember which direction you were riding, Kenzie?â one of the detectives asks.
âUp toward the school.â
âThatâs north, right?â he says. âNorth on Brannigan?â
âI guess,â I say.
âAre you sure about that? This is important, Kenzie,â the other detective says.
My dad is listening carefully.
âI guess it was north,â I say. Iâve never been great with directions. Mostly I navigate by left and right.
âYou were riding toward school, and you turned onto Brannigan from Fifth Street, right?â the same detective asks.
âYeah.â
The two detectives look at each other. My dad shakes his head.
âYou canât be serious,â he says. âYouâre giving my son grief because he rode his bicycle the wrong way up a one-way street?â
âItâs against the law,â the detective says.
âItâs a bicycle ,â my dad says.
âHe hit a girl.â
Not just a girl. I hit Stassi.
âA girl who stepped out into the street in front of him without looking both ways to see if anything was coming,â my dad says. âIsnât that right, son?â
âDave, it was Stassi,â my mom says quietly.
My dad absorbs this.
âStassi Mikalchuk?â my dad says, as if he knows hundreds of Stassis and wants to make sure which one sheâs talking about.
âStassi Mikalczyk ,â my mom says. My dad never gets her name right.
âIs she all right?â my dad asks.
My mom says she doesnât know. The cops donât know either. Or, if they do, they donât say.
âStill, when you step out onto the street, you should look both ways,â my dad says. âYou avoid a lot of accidents that way.â
My mother squeezes my hand, hard, and thatâs when it hits me. The best way to prevent the kind of accident I just had is to not ride the wrong way up a one-way street because, really, why would anyone look both ways when traffic is only supposed to be going one way?
âWhy donât we step outside for a moment, sir?â one of the detectives says to my dad. âSo we can talk.â
My dad doesnât want to. I can
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