Stories: I came to take my son back

I adopted my son when he was three.

His birth mother had abandoned him at a shelter. No note, no explanation—just a frightened little boy with tear-streaked cheeks and a stuffed dinosaur he refused to let go of.

From the moment I met him, I knew I wanted to be his mom.

Over the years, I tried my best. I packed lunches, read bedtime stories, helped with homework, and sat through every school play and soccer game.

He respected me. He appreciated me.

But deep down, I could tell he didn’t fully see me as his real mom.

Sometimes he would ask quiet questions about the woman who gave birth to him. I never lied, but I never knew what to say either.

Then came his eleventh birthday.

We were halfway through dinner when the doorbell rang.

I opened it—and there she was.

A woman I recognized immediately from the old adoption paperwork.

His birth mother.

She looked nervous but determined.

“I came to take my son back,” she said.

The words hit me like a slap.

“After eight years?” I snapped.

She tried to explain—said she had been young, scared, that she had changed. That she deserved another chance.

But all I could think about was the little boy she had left behind.

I slammed the door in her face.

That night, I barely slept.

The next morning, I went to check on my son.

My heart stopped when I saw his bed.

It was empty.

His blanket was tossed aside, his dinosaur gone.

Panic flooded my chest.

I ran through the house calling his name, my voice shaking.

Then I heard a sound from the kitchen.

Soft humming.

When I stepped inside, I found him sitting at the table.

He had flour on his cheeks and was carefully stirring pancake batter.

“You scared me half to death!” I gasped, rushing toward him.

He looked up sheepishly.

“Sorry,” he said. “I woke up early.”

Then he slid a slightly crooked pancake onto a plate and pushed it toward me.

“Happy Mom Day.”

I blinked. “Mom Day?”

He nodded.

“I heard everything last night,” he admitted quietly. “When she came to the door.”

My stomach tightened.

“I thought maybe… you’d want me to go with her.”

I knelt beside him.

“Never,” I said softly.

He hesitated, then wrapped his arms around me.

“I know,” he whispered.

For the first time since I met him, he said the words I’d waited years to hear.

“Happy Mom Day… Mom.”

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