I Met My Birth Mom At 21, But After Her Death Her Husband Said Something That Changed Everything

79

I met my birth mom at 21 at my lowest. I moved in with her and her husband, a rich lawyer. She planned to include me in her will, but they insisted on a DNA test.

It was negative. I became homeless. 2 years later, she died under mysterious circumstances.

Then one day, her husband flipped out and confessed to me that—

I’ll back up. At 21, I was sleeping on a friend’s busted futon, working double shifts at a gas station in Kansas City. I’d aged out of foster care and burned through the little support they offered.

I didn’t have a degree, a car, or even a proper coat for winter. Then I got a Facebook message from a woman named Thérèse. She said she was my biological mother.

She’d been 19 when she gave birth, and her parents made her give me up. Said she never stopped thinking about me. She found me through some amateur genealogy site where I’d uploaded my DNA two years ago, just to see if I had any siblings out there.

I cried when I read her message. Not the cute movie kind. The snotty, ugly, gut-deep kind.

She offered to fly me out to Oregon to meet her. I had nothing to lose. When I got there, it was like stepping into a lifestyle I’d only seen on TV.

Massive house on a hill. Glass staircase. Art that looked like it belonged in a museum.

Her husband, Charles, was a corporate attorney—quiet, stiff, always glued to his phone. But Thérèse was soft. She hugged me like she’d done it a thousand times already.

Kept touching my cheek like she couldn’t believe I was real. She asked me to move in, just “for a while.” I was supposed to stay for two weeks. I stayed for four months.

She started introducing me to people as her son. Took me to family events. Even got her assistant to help me apply for community college.

Said she wanted to add me to her will—“just something modest,” she said—but Charles insisted we do a DNA test first. It made me uncomfortable, but I understood. I’d seen enough scams growing up.

The test came back. Negative. Not even a faint match.

Nothing. The mood shifted overnight. Thérèse wouldn’t look me in the eye.

Charles said I had to leave “as soon as possible.” No more school help, no more groceries, no more room. Just like that. I packed my duffel bag and caught a Greyhound east.

Landed in St. Louis, where I knew a guy who knew a guy with a couch. That couch became my home for almost a year.

The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
Tap READ MORE to discover the rest 🔎👇