Liam came downstairs, freezing when he saw her through the open door. “Hey, baby,” she said. “Sweet 16, huh?
I brought presents.”
He looked at me, confusion rippling across his face. I’d shown him pictures of Kayla, and told him the truth in age-appropriate ways over the years. She had problems.
Maybe someday she’d be ready. Apparently, someday had arrived in a $60,000 SUV. She visited every day that week, buying him expensive clothes, and sharing tales of “complicated times” and “endless love” that had kept them apart.
Then she turned up with the most flamboyant gift yet. One scorching afternoon in July, a silver convertible pulled up to our faded duplex. It was topped with a garish red bow.
I entered to the porch as Kayla climbed out of the convertible. Liam grasped at my side. “What do you think, baby?” Kayla said.
“It’s all yours.”
Liam whooped for joy. He jumped down the porch steps and ran to hug Kayla. “You don’t need to struggle here anymore,” she declared.
“Come live with me, baby. It’s time we were a family again.”
And just like that, the boy I’d named and raised like my own was gone.
No hug. No goodbye.
Just excitement overtaking guilt as he slid into the driver’s seat of a car worth more than everything I owned. Two days later, I got the text: “Thanks. I’ll give her an opportunity.”
Alone in our silent house, I collected up tiny drawings labeled “Auntie/Mom,” crayon Mother’s Day cards, and packed them in boxes.
There were no casseroles, no sympathy cards, no formal ceremony to mark my loss. Just empty spaces where a boy had grown up and a silence where his laughter had been. I developed a script: “He’s living with his mom now.
Yes, his actual mom. No, it’s great, a wonderful experience for him.”
Eventually, they stopped asking.
Then came another knock.
When I opened the door, I nearly didn’t recognize him.
“Liam,” I said. He stood awkwardly, hands packed pockets, a duffel bag at his feet. “Hey, Aunt Mae.” His voice crazed.
“She’s… she’s kicking me out. Said I need to look for my own life now.”
I said nothing, just gazed at this stranger wearing Liam’s face. “College didn’t work out,” he continued.
“I wasn’t focused enough, she said. Wasting her money. And when her boyfriend moved in last month, things got worse, and—” He stopped.
“I didn’t know where else to go.”
He wasn’t here to apologize… he just had nowhere else to go. But he was my little boy, and he had nowhere else to go. “You can take the couch,” I said
“I don’t have a spare room anymore.”
“I have rules,” I told him.
“This isn’t like before.”
He nodded quickly. “Of course. Whatever you say.”
Liam did his own laundry and contributed to the rent from his part-time job at a garage.
Slowly, cautiously, we created something from the ashes.
He told me about the disasters of living with Kayla — the revolving door of boyfriends, the drinking, the predictions he could never quite meet. “The car was repossessed after the first year,” he admitted one night over takeout. “Turns out she hadn’t actually bought it.
Just leased it to attract me.”
I nodded, unsh0cked. He verified: “I should have called. After I left.
But everything was so perfect at first. I was finally getting to spend time with my mother, and then, when things became bad… it felt like it was too late, like I could never make up for what I did to you.”
“It hurt when you left like that,” I said, “but you were a kid, as charmed by Kayla as everyone else she ever set her sights on winning over. I get it, but you still should’ve called.”
He smiled then, a small, sad smile that carried the weight of our shared history.
“Thanks for giving me a second chance, even if I’ve done nothing to deserve it.”
I looked at him, this boy-turned-man who’d broken my heart. “That’s what family does,” I told him.
