He held a small red toy car in both hands, rolling it back and forth without really looking at it. His eyes stayed fixed on the ground, as if meeting anyone’s gaze might make him disappear.
I’d been told his mother had left to begin a new life with a man who didn’t want children.
But hearing it and seeing him were two very different things.
When I crouched down and introduced myself, he didn’t answer. He just tightened his grip on the toy car.
In that moment, something inside me shifted. I didn’t just want to adopt him. I wanted to promise him something permanent—something no one else had given him.
A home.
Stability.
A love that wouldn’t pack its bags.
When he asked about his mother during those early months, the question always came quietly, usually at bedtime.
“Is she coming back?”
The truth sat heavy in my throat.
I couldn’t bring myself to tell a five-year-old that he had been left behind.
That someone had chosen a different life over him.
So I told him she had died when he was two.
I said it gently. Carefully. As if wrapping the words in cotton would soften their edges.
It felt merciful at the time.
Kinder than the truth. I convinced myself I was shielding him from a rejection too sharp for a child to carry.
Years passed.
Adam grew into a thoughtful, compassionate young man. He worked hard in school, rarely caused trouble, and still kept that same quiet sensitivity I’d first seen on the foster home steps.
He’s in his final year of college now.
I expected the usual hug at the door, the familiar warmth in his smile.
Instead, he was distant. Polite, but cold. His answers were short.
His eyes avoided mine.
I asked if something was wrong.
He said, “I’m just tired.”
But it wasn’t exhaustion. It was something else.
Three days later, he was gone.
No note. No explanation.
My calls went straight to voicemail.
My messages were read but unanswered.
I didn’t sleep. I imagined car accidents. Hospitals.
Every terrible possibility a parent’s mind can invent at three in the morning.
When he finally came back, it was just after sunset.
He stood in the doorway like a stranger.
His hands were shaking.
His eyes were red.
Without a word, he handed me a folded newspaper.
I recognized her name before I even read the headline.
It was his mother’s obituary.
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