Becca is 10 years old. She waits for me patiently outside the restaurant because—big surprise—I am late for our meeting. I will be late for my own cremation.
Becca’s hair is pulled into a side ponytail. She is wearing corduroy pants, floral top, and roper boots. The girl sits waiting, grasping her guide cane. Her eyelids are closed. She is smiling. Becca, I will soon learn, always smiles.
Becca’s mother makes our formal introductions. The little girl presents her hand. We shake.
“Nice to meet you,” she says, pumping my hand in her tiny grip.
“Nice to meet you,” I say.
The restaurant is alive with sounds. The place is packed. Everyone in Sardis City must be eating at Bama Bucks steakhouse and wild game restaurant today.
Becca and I sit across from each other. Becca’s mom sits beside her and reads the menu aloud, but Becca already knows what she wants. Chicken tenders. French fries. Side of ranch.
Our server delivers hot dinner rolls. Becca’s mom guides Becca’s hands to the bread basket. And Becca is still smiling as we get
to know each other.
There’s a scar underneath Becca’s jawline, from where doctors recently removed her lymph nodes.
“How are you feeling since your surgery, Becca?” I ask.
“Oh, I feel really good,” Becca says.
“Has your energy come back?”
Becca’s dad answers this one. “Becca has a lot of energy.
Becca has been blind for one year now. It’s still new. But somehow, the smile never goes anywhere.
“When I first woke up,” Becca says, “after they took out my eye, I could feel the patch on my face, and I knew what they’d done to me. It was pretty obvious. My eye was gone. I was so scared, I started screaming ‘Mom, I can’t see! I can’t see!’ But then after I got scared, you know, I was okay.”
Becca explains all this to me as…