Stories: Family Is Forever

My daughter Emma turned nine last weekend. After the cake, she sat cross-legged on the living room floor and started opening gifts while the family watched and smiled.

Then she picked up the one from my mother-in-law, Carol.

“It’s from Grandma!” Emma said happily.

I glanced at Carol and, for just a second, I thought I saw a smirk.

Emma tore open the wrapping paper and pulled out a silver photo frame engraved with the words “Family Is Forever.” Inside was a printed collage of photos—Carol, my husband Brian, his sister and her kids, even Carol’s late husband. Everyone smiling at the lake last summer.

Everyone except me.

Everyone except Emma.

Even the family dog was in one of the photos.

Emma’s smile slowly faded as she stared at the frame.

Carol tilted her head and said sweetly, “I just wanted her to have a family photo that actually makes sense.”

The room went quiet.

The truth was Emma wasn’t Brian’s biological daughter. Her father—my first husband—died in a car accident when she was two. I met Brian a year later, and he loved us through the grief. From the start, Emma called him “Daddy.” She has no memory of life before him.

But Carol had never fully accepted it.

Emma kept staring at the picture.

Brian and I were about to speak when Emma gently set the frame down on the coffee table.

Then she stood up.

She walked straight over to Brian and slipped her small hand into his.

“Dad,” she said softly, “can we take a picture together?”

Brian blinked, surprised. “Of course, sweetheart.”

Emma looked around the room and smiled politely.

“But only the people who are actually my family.”

I grabbed my phone.

Emma pulled Brian and me into a hug in the middle of the living room. My sister-in-law quietly stepped behind us, smiling. Even my brother joined in.

“Ready?” I asked.

Emma nodded happily.

Click.

When I showed her the photo, her eyes lit up.

“That’s the one I want in my room.”

Brian picked up Carol’s frame and quietly slid the photo out. He replaced it with the picture we had just taken.

Then he set the frame back in front of Emma.

“There,” he said gently. “Now it actually makes sense.”

Emma hugged him tightly.

Across the room, Carol sat stiffly, her smile gone.

But Emma didn’t notice.

She was too busy holding the photo of the family she had chosen—and the one that had always chosen her back.

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