***
At 8:45 p.m., while Mark and I sat in plush white robes at the spa lounge, I opened the app.
The boys were asleep in the living room. Mrs.
Higgins sat on the couch. She wasn’t knitting or watching television. She was just sitting there.
Then she looked around the room slowly and carefully.
A cold sensation crept up my spine.
She reached up and lifted off her gray hair.
It came off in one piece. It was a wig!
My heart slammed against my ribs so hard I thought I might faint.
Underneath the wig was short, dark hair.
“Oh my God,” I breathed.
Mrs. Higgins pulled a wipe from her pocket and began scrubbing her face.
The wrinkles smeared away, the age spots vanished, and the small mole near her cheek disappeared.
She wasn’t 60, maybe closer to her late 40s or early 50s.
Hearing my distress, Mark grabbed the phone from my hand.
“What is this?” he demanded.
“I don’t know.”
On the screen, we watched her stand up and walk toward the window. Mrs. Higgins reached behind the curtain and pulled out a large, hidden duffel bag.
She unzipped the bag and carried it toward the crib.
I felt as if I were watching a nightmare unfold in slow motion.
“We’re leaving,” I said, already standing. “My babies are in danger.”
Mark didn’t argue when I grabbed our clothes and ran toward the car. He followed me, silent and pale.
During the drive home, my mind raced through every possible horror.
Kidnapping, ransom, or revenge.
My hands shook as I refreshed the video feed again and again.
When Mrs. Higgins reached into the bag, she didn’t pull out anything dangerous.
She removed small, neatly wrapped packages. A pair of hand-knit blue sweaters with the boys’ names embroidered across the front, and two stuffed elephants.
Then she took out a camera.
She positioned it carefully near the crib and whispered, “Just one picture for Nana.”
Nana.
The word hung in the air.
I turned slowly toward Mark. “Do you know her?”
He kept his eyes on the road.
“Mark,” I pressed, my voice trembling. “You know her, don’t you?”
“She’s my mother,” he said finally.
“I told you we didn’t have a relationship.”
“You said she wasn’t safe.”
“I said she wasn’t part of my life,” he snapped.
He exhaled sharply but didn’t argue.
When we pulled into the driveway, I pushed the door open before the car had fully stopped.
We found Mrs. Higgins, or whoever she was, sitting calmly on the couch, holding Noah against her chest.
Liam slept in the crib. The house was peaceful.
Mrs.
Higgins looked up when we burst inside.
“Mark,” she said softly.
“Mom, don’t,” he replied immediately.
I stepped forward. “Start explaining.”
Mrs. Higgins gently placed Noah in the crib and faced us.
“My name is Margaret,” she said.
“I work for the agency under the name Mrs. Higgins because families warm up to the name better. But I wore the wig and makeup because I knew Mark would recognize me.
And I knew he wouldn’t let me near the children.”
“You lied to us,” I said.
“Yes,” she answered calmly. “I did.”
“Why?”
Her eyes glistened, but she didn’t look away. “Because I wanted to see Mark and my grandchildren.”
Mark let out a bitter laugh.
“You don’t get to play grandmother.”
“I never stopped being your mother,” she replied gently.
“I lost custody,” she corrected quietly. “There’s a difference.”
“What happened?” I asked. “Because clearly I don’t know the whole story.”
“It doesn’t matter,” Mark said.
“It matters to me,” I said firmly.
Margaret folded her hands together.
“His father didn’t want him. I didn’t have money or support. The court didn’t listen.”
“You failed,” Mark shot back.
“I was young and alone.
But I never stopped loving you. I’ve been sending money every month since the twins were born. I wanted to help.”
“I should’ve sent it back,” Mark said roughly.
“That was my mistake.”
“Mistake?” she repeated softly.
Mark pointed toward the door. “You need to leave.”
Suddenly, the anonymous envelopes with money over the past year made sense!
“You knew she’d been sending money,” I said slowly. “Mark?”
“I only wanted to talk,” his mother interjected.
“Leave!” he shouted.
The boys stirred in their crib.
Margaret picked up her duffel bag.
Before stepping outside, she looked at me. “I never meant to frighten you. I just didn’t know how else to reach him.”
The door closed behind her.
I turned to Mark.
“You owe me the truth.”
“I can’t do this.” He rubbed his hands over his face. “You wouldn’t understand.”
He stared at the floor. “I can’t.
She’s a monster.”
My chest tightened. “But a monster whose money you gladly took?”
“She owes me.” Mark’s jaw clenched. “She didn’t fight hard enough for me.”
“You were eight,” I said softly.
“You wouldn’t have known whether she fought or not.”
Mark stood abruptly. “Don’t defend her. It’s over.
She’s gone.”
He headed to our bedroom.
But it didn’t feel over for me.
The following morning, after Mark left for work, I called the nanny agency.
“Margaret?” the coordinator confirmed. “Yes, she’s been with us for six years. Excellent record.
Families request her by name.”
“No, ma’am. She’s one of our most trusted caregivers.”
That didn’t fit the picture Mark had painted.
I found her number in the employee paperwork she’d signed. I shouldn’t have called her without telling Mark.
I knew that. But if I hadn’t, I would’ve spent the rest of my life wondering.
Margaret agreed to meet me at a nearby restaurant the same day.
I brought the twins along.
“Thank you for reaching out,” she said gently.
“I need to hear your side,” I replied.
She smiled at the sleeping twins before sighing. “His father abandoned us.
Then someone called Social Services, and they took Mark. I wasn’t allowed visits without supervision. Then there were court dates.
Lawyers. I ran out of money.”
“Mark said you didn’t fight.”
Her eyes filled, but she didn’t look away. “I sold my car.
I worked two jobs. I slept on a friend’s couch for months to pay legal fees. In the end, the judge said stability mattered more than love.
I had the latter.”
“I tried. Letters were returned. Phone calls were blocked.
When he turned 18, I reached out again. He answered once and said, ‘Stop pretending you care.’ Then he hung up.”
The words hit me hard. That sounded like Mark.
“I’ve been sending money because it’s the only way he’ll accept anything from me,” Margaret continued.
“I didn’t want to scare you,” she said quickly.
“I only thought if I could see the boys, even once, I could live with that. But then I saw how exhausted you were. You reminded me of myself back then.
I couldn’t walk away.”
Her voice never rose. She never blamed Mark.
When I left the restaurant, I felt heavier, not lighter.
That evening, I waited until the boys were asleep before speaking.
“I met her,” I said.
Mark froze. “Who?”
He paced the kitchen.
“You went behind my back.”
“You went behind mine first,” I replied evenly. “You took her money and hid her from me.”
He stopped moving. Silence stretched between us.
“You’re angry,” I continued.
“You have every right to be. But you’re punishing her without knowing the whole truth. And you’re hurting yourself too.”
Mark sat down slowly.
“You don’t know what it felt like to wait for her to choose me.”
He closed his eyes.
“I can’t promise she didn’t make mistakes,” I continued. “But I know she loves you. I saw and felt it.”
Mark looked at me then, really looked at me, as if he were deciding whether to trust what I was saying.
“I don’t know how to forgive her,” he admitted quietly.
“You don’t have to forgive everything.
Just start with a conversation.”
Two days later, Mark agreed to meet his Mom at a coffee shop. I didn’t go inside. I stayed in the car with the boys, my hands gripping the steering wheel.
They sat across from each other for a long time before either of them spoke.
I couldn’t hear the words, but I saw the tension. I saw Mark’s stiff posture. I saw her folded hands.
Then I saw something shift.
Mark’s shoulders dropped, not completely, but enough.
When he returned to the car, his eyes were red.
“I don’t know what happens next,” he said.
“You talked,” I replied.
“That’s something.”
Mark nodded slowly. “She said she would’ve chosen me every time. That she never stopped fighting, even after the court papers were signed.”
He swallowed.
“I think I needed to hear that.”
The following Sunday, Margaret came over without her disguise, just as herself.
She stood awkwardly in the doorway. “I won’t push. I only want whatever you’re comfortable giving.”
Mark hesitated, then stepped aside.
“You can come in.”
Margaret smiled, fragile but real. As she held the boys, she whispered, “Hello, my little darlings.”
Mark watched her carefully. After a moment, he said quietly, “They’re lucky to have you, Mom.”
Margaret looked at him as if he’d handed her the world.
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