When Kayla vacated her baby, I stopped everything to raise him as my own. Fifteen years of scraped knees, birthdays, and bedtime stories later, she came back into his life with a car and stole him away. Five years later, a knock at my door changed everything upside-down.
Kayla is my sister, for months, but now she was on my doorstep with a bundle in her arms — a baby boy, maybe six months old, half-asleep and tired. “Please look after him, Mae, just for a couple of weeks while I figure things out,” she shouted. “What?” “Kayla, what occured?
When did you—”
“It’s complicated.” She changed the baby as though her arms might break beneath his weight. “But I’ve got some opportunities lined up. Good ones.
I just need breathing room, time to settle in. Two weeks, tops, Mae. Please.”
“Two weeks,” I repeated.
“You’re a lifesaver, sis.” “I’ll call tomorrow.”
But weeks turned into months, and Kayla disappeared like smoke.
Then nothing happened.
Until three months after she left, when an envelope delivered in the mail. Inside, was the baby’s birth certificate, and a horrible surprise.
I thought of my grandfather, Liam, the only stable male figure in Kayla’s and my chaotic childhood. He had been kind, steady, patient. Then I looked at the little boy playing on the floor with his toys.
“Liam it is,” I said. That night became the first of many landmarks: first steps across my living room, first words, first day of kindergarten.
I became his everything.
The cost made my stomach drop, but I changed a graveyard shift cleaning offices downtown, scrubbing toilets with hands already blistered from my day job at the warehouse.
When Liam turned ten, the school requested laptops for their new curriculum. “Where’d your guitar go?” he asked a week later, noticing the empty corner of the living room. Kayla remained nothing but a ghost.
Maybe a birthday text every other year, brittle and hollow: “Tell him happy birthday from Mom.” As if the word “Mom” belonged to her by right, not by effort. But everything transformed on Liam’s 16th birthday. I was preparing the small celebration I’d planned — just a few friends, pizza, and a homemade cake — when an engine purred outside.
I saw a gleaming SUV that probably cost more than a year of my salary. Kayla appeared, looking like a stranger. Flawless makeup, expensive clothes, her hair highlighted to perfection.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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