Twelve years ago, during my 5 a.m. trash route, I found abandoned twin babies in a stroller on a frozen sidewalk and ended up becoming their mom. I thought the wildest part of our story was how we found each other—until a phone call this year proved me very, very wrong.
I’m 41, and 12 years ago, my life flipped on a random Tuesday at 5 a.m.
I work sanitation.
I drive one of those big trash trucks.
That morning was bone-cold. The kind of cold that bites your cheeks and makes your eyes water.
At home, my husband Steven was recovering from surgery. I’d changed his bandages, fed him, kissed his forehead.
“Text me if you need anything,” I told him.
He tried to grin.
“Go save the city from banana peels, Abbie.”
Life was simple then. Tiring, but simple. Me, Steven, our tiny house, our bills.
No kids.
Just a quiet ache where we wished they were.
I turned onto one of my usual streets, humming along to the radio.
That’s when I saw the stroller.
It was just sitting there. In the middle of the sidewalk. Not by a house, not near a car.
Just… abandoned.
My stomach dropped.
I slammed the truck into park and turned on my hazards.
When I got closer, my heart started pounding.
Two tiny babies. Twin girls. Maybe six months old.
Curled up under mismatched blankets, cheeks pink from the cold.
They were breathing. I could see little puffs of their breath in the air.
I looked up and down the street.
No parent. No one shouting.
No door swinging open.
“Hey, sweethearts,” I whispered. “Where’s your mom?”
One of them opened her eyes and looked right at me.
I checked the diaper bag. Half a can of formula.
A couple of diapers. No note. No ID.
Nothing.
My hands started to shake.
I called 911.
“Hi, I’m on my trash route,” I said, voice trembling. “There’s a stroller with two babies. They’re alone.
It’s freezing.”
The dispatcher’s whole tone changed.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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