Stories: You can’t be here

My mom had me when she was seventeen.

She gave me up for adoption before I was even a week old.

For most of my childhood, that was just a fact in my life story—something I told people without much emotion. My adoptive parents were loving, steady people, and I never felt unwanted.

But when I turned twenty, curiosity caught up with me.

I found her.

After weeks of searching through records and old addresses, I finally stood outside her house, my hands shaking as I knocked on the door.

When she opened it and saw my face, the color drained from hers instantly.

“You can’t be here,” she whispered.

“I just wanted to meet you,” I said softly. “Just once.”

Tears filled her eyes, but she shook her head.

“Forget about me,” she said quickly. “My husband is powerful, and he’d leave me if he knew about you. Please… just go.”

The door closed before I could say anything else.

I stood there for a long time, staring at the wood grain of the door, wondering how someone could look at their own child and be that afraid.

Eventually, I walked away.

I told myself I had closure.

A year passed.

One rainy evening, there was a knock at my apartment door.

When I opened it, a tall man stood there, drenched from the rain. His eyes were red, like he hadn’t slept.

“I’m sorry to show up like this,” he said quietly. “Are you… Emily?”

I nodded cautiously.

He swallowed hard.

“I’m David,” he said. “Your mother’s husband.”

My heart stopped.

“I know this must be confusing,” he continued, his voice shaking. “But I need you to know something.”

He reached into his coat pocket and handed me a folded letter.

I hesitated before opening it.

The handwriting was shaky, but I recognized her name at the bottom.

“Emily,” it read, “if you’re reading this, it means David finally found you. I was wrong to send you away. I was scared—scared he’d see me differently. But the truth is, he’s the best man I’ve ever known. I should have trusted him.”

My vision blurred with tears.

I looked up at David.

“She told me about you two months ago,” he said quietly. “She was terrified I’d leave.”

“And…?” I asked.

He gave a sad smile.

“I told her I wished I’d known sooner.”

He cleared his throat.

“She’s in the car. She’s been crying the whole way here because she thinks you’ll slam the door like she did.”

I stepped outside.

Sitting in the passenger seat was the woman who had once told me to forget her.

Our eyes met.

For a moment, neither of us moved.

Then she whispered through the open window, “Can we try again?”

And for the first time in twenty-one years…

I said yes.

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