Seven years ago, my daughter dropped her two young kids on my doorstep, promising to return in a year. I believed her. But one year turned into silence.
Now, out of the blue, she’s back, demanding her children. She has no idea how much has changed, or that it won’t be so easy to get them back.
You know how some mornings feel like ordinary beginnings until they become the day that splits your life in two? Seven years ago, I woke up to one of those mornings.
The mist hung thick around my porch like a gray blanket, and there she stood — my daughter, suitcase in one hand, the other smoothing down my graying hair like I was the child who needed comforting.
“We’re moving to the city to start a business.
We need you to keep the kids until everything stabilizes,” she said. “It will just be for a year.”
Behind her legs, two little faces peered up at me: Emma, six, with pigtails that never stayed straight, and Jake, eight, clutching a worn stuffed elephant.
Their eyes held a wide, uncertain look.
My daughter kissed my cheek, gave each child a final squeeze that lasted three seconds too short, and walked to the car where her husband sat, drumming his fingers on the steering wheel.
But as she turned back for one last look, something in her gaze didn’t say, “See you soon.” It said goodbye.
The kids stood frozen in my foyer afterward, backpacks still strapped to their shoulders like they were ready to bolt at any moment.
I kneeled beside them and forced a smile.
“I get to take care of my grandchildren for a year?” I said brightly, brushing Emma’s bangs from her eyes. “I am so lucky. That’s 365 days of spoiling you both with cookies!”
But they didn’t buy my efforts to cheer them up at all.
It wasn’t too bad at first.
We soon settled into a routine, and the kids got used to living with me. Their parents called every night, and that helped them feel secure.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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