“You won’t be alone.
I’m right here.”
“I don’t have time for this,” she said when she told me. “I just got through one nightmare.”
She tried to stay strong for the children. She joked about wigs and insisted on taking the kids to school even when she could barely stand.
I began coming over every morning.
“Rest. I’ve got them.”
“You already have your own,” she’d protest weakly.
“So? They’re all just kids.”
During those months, there were moments when Rachel looked at me as though she wanted to say something important.
She would start to speak, then stop herself and stare off into the distance with a troubled expression.
One time she said, “You’re the best friend I’ve ever had.
You know that, right?”
“You’re mine, too.”
“I’m not sure I am… a good friend, that is.”
At the time I assumed she felt guilty because I was helping so much, but now I know I misunderstood.
Six months later, she was dying.
“I need you to listen,” she whispered.
“I’m here.”
“Promise me you’ll take my kids, please. There’s nobody else, and I don’t want them to be split up. They’ve already lost so much…”
“I’ll take them, and I’ll treat them like my own.”
“You’re the only one I trust.”
Those words settled deep inside me.
“There’s something else,” she said, her voice barely audible.
I leaned closer.
“What is it?”
She closed her eyes. For a moment I thought she had fallen asleep. Then she opened them again and looked at me with such intensity that it made the back of my neck tingle.
“Rebecca… keep a close eye on her, okay?”
“Of course.”
I assumed she meant it because Becca was the youngest, still just a baby, but those words would later return to haunt me.
When the time came, keeping my promise to Rachel wasn’t difficult.
Neither she nor her husband had close relatives willing to take the children. My husband didn’t hesitate.
Overnight, we became parents to six kids.
The house felt smaller, louder, and messier, but also fuller in a way I couldn’t quite explain.
As the weeks turned into months, the children grew close like siblings, and my husband and I loved them all as if they were our own. After a few years, life finally felt steady again.
I began to think we had made it through the hardest part.
But one day, while I was home alone, someone knocked on the door.
Standing on the porch was a well-dressed woman I had never seen before.
She looked a few years younger than me, maybe five. Her hair was pulled tightly back, and she wore an expensive-looking gray coat. But what stood out most were her eyes.
They were red and swollen, as if she had been crying recently.
She didn’t introduce herself.
“You’re Rachel’s friend,” she said. “The one who adopted her four children?”
I nodded, though the way she said it made my skin prickle.
She continued. “I know we don’t know each other, but I knew Rachel, and I need to tell you the truth.
I’ve been looking for you for a long time.”
“What truth?”
She handed me an envelope and said, “She wasn’t who she claimed to be. You need to read this letter from her.”
I stood there on the porch with the door half open, one hand still holding the knob and the envelope heavy in the other.
I unfolded the letter.
Rachel’s handwriting was unmistakable. As I read the words, it felt like I had forgotten how to breathe.
I’ve rewritten this more times than I can count, because every version feels like it says too much or not enough.
I don’t know which one you’ll hear.
I kept reading.
I remember exactly what we agreed to, even if we’ve both told ourselves different stories since.
You came to me when you were pregnant and barely holding yourself together. You told me you loved your baby, but you were afraid of what would happen if you tried to raise her the way things were then.
“Just keep reading.”
When I offered to adopt her, it wasn’t because I wanted to take something from you. It was because I thought I could hold things steady until you could breathe again.
My fingers tightened around the paper.
One of Rachel’s children wasn’t actually hers? And I had never known?
We decided to keep it private. You didn’t want questions.
I didn’t want explanations. I told people I was pregnant because it felt easier than telling the truth. And because I believed it protected all of us.
“So she wasn’t pregnant,” I said.
“No.
Not with my girl, and now you know the truth, it’s time to give her back.”
Instinctively, I stepped sideways, blocking the doorway.
“That’s not happening.”
The woman moved closer. “I came here in good faith, without the police. But if you’re going to be difficult…”
Somehow I managed to remain calm even though my heart pounded and every instinct screamed at me to do something—run, hide, anything to protect my kids.
“Rachel adopted her.
I adopted her. That doesn’t go away just because you want it to.”
“It’s what she promised me!” The woman pointed at the letter. “It’s all there.”
I forced myself to keep reading, even though part of me wanted to tear the letter into pieces and pretend this woman had never knocked on my door.
I told you once that we would talk again when things were better for you.
That we would figure it out. I don’t know if that was kindness or cowardice, but I know it gave you hope. And I’m sorry for that.
All I can ask is that you think first about her.
Not about what was lost, or what feels unfinished, but about the life she has now.
“I turned my life around. I can take care of her now, I swear it!” The woman’s lip trembled.
“She deserves to be with me, her family.”
I thought about the four children upstairs and how carefully we had built this family. I thought about the trust Rachel had placed in me.
And I thought about the secret she had kept from me.
“She lied to me,” I said.
“Yes,” the woman replied. “She lied to everyone.”
“But she didn’t steal your child, and there’s nothing here where she promises to give her back.”
Her eyes flashed. “She convinced me to give her up, and she said we’d figure it out later.”
“You signed the papers.
You knew what adoption meant.”
“I thought I’d get another chance! I thought when I got my life together, when I could be the mother she deserved—”
“That’s not how it works,” I said, more gently now. “You don’t get to come back years later and undo a child’s life.”
“She’s mine,” the woman insisted.
“She has my blood.”
“She has my name, she has brothers and sisters, and a room full of her things. We might not be blood, but we are family, and I have the legal papers to prove it.”
The woman shook her head, nearly pleading. “You can’t do this to me!
You were supposed to understand…”
“I do. I understand what Rachel did, and I understand what you’re asking, but the answer is no.”
“You don’t even want to know which one?”
Rachel’s words echoed in my memory: “Rebecca… keep a close eye on her, okay?” It had to be her.
“It doesn’t matter because they’re all mine now,” I said. “Every single one of them.
And I won’t let you take that away from any of them.”
“What are you talking about?”
“The adoption was private. There were irregularities. My lawyer says—”
“No!
Whatever your lawyer says, the answer is still no.”
“You can’t just—”
“Watch me.”
We stared at each other.
I could see the desperation in her eyes, the years of regret and what-ifs. But I also saw something else: a willingness to destroy the life that existed now for the chance to reclaim what she had lost.
Finally, she lunged forward and grabbed the letter from my hands.
“I’ll be back, and next time, you won’t stop me from claiming what’s mine.”
She turned and walked down the steps.
I closed the door and rested my forehead against it.
Rachel had lied.
She had kept an enormous secret, and now… now I would have to search through Rachel’s belongings to find the original adoption papers. And I would need to speak with a lawyer, just to be safe.
A year later, the court confirmed what I already knew: adoptions cannot be undone simply because someone regrets their decision.
Becca was mine, and her biological mother had no legal claim.
That day, as I walked down the courthouse steps, I knew my family was safe — and no one would ever take any of my children away from me.
