My nephew Liam came to stay with me for the entire summer. From the very first day, he wore black gloves. Every day. All day. Even inside the house.

When I finally asked him about it, he gave me a small, practiced smile and said,
“Uncle… my hands are just sensitive.”

At first, I didn’t press him.

But one morning, I quietly opened the bathroom door.

He was standing at the sink.

The gloves were off.

And when I saw his palms… my heart almost stopped.

Liam arrived at our house on a bright Saturday morning in early June. The kind of day that makes summer feel perfect—clear blue sky, warm air, sunlight spilling across the yard.

I stood at the door feeling oddly nervous. It had been months since I’d last seen him—back at a quiet Christmas dinner where he barely spoke and stayed tucked into the corner.

Liam was my sister’s son. After she died, he’d been shuffled between temporary homes. Foster relatives, short stays, unfamiliar places. He was the kind of kid people barely noticed—a polite shadow who tried not to take up space.

So when I offered for him to spend the summer with us, I hoped it might give him a chance to breathe. To be a normal kid for once.

When I opened the door, he was standing there shifting awkwardly. His backpack looked too light for three months away, while the duffel bag over his shoulder seemed heavy for someone his age.

But what caught my attention immediately were the gloves.

Black leather gloves.

In the middle of June.

“Liam,” I said, pulling him into a quick hug before he could step back. He’d grown tall—fifteen now—but still all elbows and nervous energy. His shoulders curved inward like he was trying to shrink himself.

“You made it.”

“Yes, sir,” he answered quickly before correcting himself.
“I mean… Uncle Daniel.”

I laughed softly. “Relax. No need to be formal here. Come inside.”

As we walked in, I noticed how carefully he moved, like he was testing every step. He wiped his shoes twice on the mat even though they were already clean.

He thanked me for the water.

He thanked Maya, my wife, for asking about the trip.

He even murmured “thanks” to the dog for sitting nearby.

But it wasn’t just the politeness.

It was the gloves.

He kept them on during dinner. When we had tacos that night, he didn’t even touch the food directly. He lifted it using a napkin instead, as if his hands couldn’t make contact with anything.