The day before my 63rd birthday, I found out that my son had planned a trip and was leaving me behind to look after 18 children. I didn’t say anything at all. On my birthday itself, he called: “Mom, where are you?” I smiled: “Don’t worry … Venice is beautiful!”

10

I’m Margaret Thompson, sixty-two years old, and I thought I knew exactly who I was. The devoted mother. The doting grandmother.

The woman who always said yes when family needed something. For thirty-seven years, I had built my entire identity around being there for everyone else. But that Tuesday, everything changed.

“Mom, thank God you’re here,” David said, bursting through my front door without knocking. My son has this way of entering rooms like he owns them, his six-foot frame filling the doorway, his designer suit perfectly pressed even at the end of a workday. At thirty-five, David had inherited his father’s confidence and, unfortunately, none of his kindness.

“Jessica and I have been planning this anniversary trip to Napa for months,” he continued, not bothering with pleasantries. “We leave Thursday morning.”

I looked up from the laundry, a familiar knot forming in my stomach. “That’s wonderful, honey.

You two deserve some time together.”

“The thing is, we need someone to watch all the kids.”

All the kids. Not just his three children, Tyler, Emma, and baby Sophia. When David said all the kids, he meant the extended-family circus that somehow always landed on my doorstep.

His sister Rebecca’s four children. His cousin Mike’s twins. Jessica’s sister’s three kids, who were having problems at home.

The neighbors’ children, whose parents trusted only me. Eighteen children total, ages two to fourteen. “Your birthday is tomorrow, I know,” David said, running his hand through his perfectly styled hair.

“But the resort booking can’t be changed. You understand, right?”

My sixty-third birthday. The one I had been quietly hoping someone might remember this year.

The one where I’d imagined maybe, just maybe, someone would plan something special for me instead of me planning everything for everyone else. “David, eighteen children is—”

“Mom, you’re amazing with kids. They all adore you.”

He was already pulling out his phone, scrolling through messages.

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