I Tracked Down My Foster Sister to Take Back What She Stole 10 Years Ago but the Truth Wasn’t What I Expected

23

For ten years, I thought I’d buried the past. But when I knocked on that door and a little girl with familiar eyes answered, I knew—I was here to take back what was mine.

I rang the doorbell, my pulse steady but my thoughts racing. The wooden door creaked open, and in front of me stood a small girl—chestnut-brown hair, wide, curious eyes, a face I could swear I had seen before.

My heart clenched.

“Hello, sweetheart,” I said smoothly, keeping my voice warm but steady. “Is your mom home?”

She tilted her head. “She’s baking cookies.

They smell so good. Do you want one?”

Cookies. Just a normal morning in this house, while my world had been spinning off its axis.

Behind me, I heard the sound of a car door slamming.

Belinda stepped out, brushing her hair back, but the moment the girl saw her, her face lit up like a thousand-watt bulb.

“Aunt Belinda! I missed you so much!”

“Well, are you going to invite us in?” I teased.

The girl spun around, sprinting back inside. “Mamá!

We have guests! You won’t believe it—Aunt Belinda is here!”

From the shadows of the house, a figure appeared. Nina.

She stepped into the doorway, her face immediately darkening. Her eyes flicked from Belinda to me, then back again.

“You shouldn’t be here,” she hissed. “We have nothing to talk about.”

“Oh, I think we do.”

“You still can’t let things go, can you, Vivi?”

“Let go?

Oh, you mean like the way you let go of our friendship? How you let go of the truth about my daughter? And then—oh, best part—you let go of any common sense and decided to take my granddaughter too?”

Nina’s face turned stone-cold.

“I was there for Belinda when you weren’t. I raised her, I protected her, and when she had no one, I was the one who saved her and Daisy from your wrath.”

Belinda finally found her voice. “That’s not…”

She faltered when she saw the way Daisy watched her, pure admiration in her young eyes.

But a new voice cut through the chaos before either woman could launch into another round.

Scooter. Of course.

“You know,” he said, flipping open his notebook, “this whole argument feels a little dramatic. Like a telenovela.”

“Scooter!

You must be in the car.”

Nina exhaled sharply, then turned to Daisy. “Go play outside, cariño. Take Scooter with you.”

Daisy hesitated but nodded, grabbing Scooter’s hand and leading him away.

“Alright,” Nina said, rubbing her temples.

“Come inside. Let’s just get this over with.”

And then, right as I stepped forward, a shadow moved behind me.

“Well,” came Harold’s smooth drawl, “if we’re having tea, I hope you saved me a cup.”

Nina’s eyes widened. Her knees buckled.

And before I could grab her, she collapsed.

***

The hospital smelled like disinfectant and worry. The hours stretched long, turning minutes into eternities. We had been there all night.

Scooter had fallen asleep in my arms, his little head resting against my shoulder as I gently stroked his back.

Belinda brought coffee cups and a paper bag from the café downstairs. Harold walked the hallway in steady, restless strides, his hands behind his back, nodding to passing nurses as if he were part of the hospital staff.

My phone had been ringing off the hook. I had ignored it as long as I could, but eventually, I picked up and confessed everything to Greg.

He hadn’t even hesitated.

“I’m coming. Right now.”

When the doctor finally emerged, we all straightened. “She made it through surgery,” he began.

“But her heart is weak. The next 48 hours will be critical. Right now, she needs a blood transfusion.”

I didn’t hesitate.

“We have the same blood type. Take mine.”

Harold opened his mouth to argue, but I shot him a look. He knew better than to fight me on this.

Soon, I was lying in a bed beside Nina, an IV running between us. A strange, silent connection that neither of us had ever expected.

For a long time, neither of us spoke.

Then, in a hoarse whisper, she asked, “Who’s Scooter?”

“Greg’s son.”

“Greg? He had kids?”

“Two.

Mia and Scooter.” I hesitated before adding, “Belinda… she can’t have children.”

Nina’s face softened, her lips parting slightly as if the realization had just hit her. “That’s why she wants Daisy.”

“She doesn’t want to take her away,” I said carefully. “She just wants to be in her life.”

Nina exhaled, long and shaky.

“You don’t understand. I was alone my whole life, Vivi. But then Daisy came, and she made everything better.

I can’t lose her.”

“You were never alone. You just didn’t want to see it.”

Before she could respond, the door burst open. Greg stormed in, Veronica hot on his heels.

“Where the hell have you all been?!” Greg’s voice thundered across the small hospital room.

“Mom, I swear, if this is another one of your insane schemes…”

“Relax, dear,” I drawled, rubbing my arm. “I was just casually donating blood.”

Then came the next wave—Margo and Dolly, rushing in with the frantic energy of women who had been pacing for hours.

“Do you have any idea how worried we were?!”

“You disappear for hours, and then we hear you’re in the hospital—again?!”

Scooter, fully awake now, ran in last, tugging Harold behind him.

“She’s awake!” he beamed. “Does this mean we can finally get answers?”

Before I could respond, a stern voice sliced through the chaos.

“Enough!”

A nurse stormed in, hands on her hips, eyes blazing. “This is a hospital, not a town hall meeting! Mrs.

Carter needs rest. You all need to leave.”

One by one, they filed out, grumbling but obedient.

A nurse unhooked me from the IV and gently guided me toward the door. “You should rest too.

I’ll set you up in an

Doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page. Tap READ MORE to discover the rest 🔎👇