Days before my wedding, a stranger told me to look inside my fiancé’s wallet before I said “I do.” I laughed it off — until I found a paper hidden behind his driver’s license. Inside was my son’s photo, his adoption records, and a handwritten note that began with two chilling words: Find him…
My first husband taught me something I never forgot: some people only love under conditions.
We had been trying for years to fall pregnant. Doctors, charts, and quiet disappointments that stacked up until the word “children” felt dangerous to say out loud.
One night, sitting beside him on the couch while he scrolled his phone, I finally said the words I’d been holding back for months.
“What if we adopted?”
Mark looked at me like I was crazy. “I’m not raising someone else’s kid. How could I ever love a child who didn’t share my DNA?”
The words landed harder than I expected.
He rolled his eyes.
“If you don’t get it, then I’m not going to bother trying to explain it.”
And just like that, I realized the man I’d married was not the husband I thought he was. I could’ve let that kill my dreams of becoming a mother for good, but I didn’t.
A few months later, I was sitting in a cramped office with an adoption worker. She slid a photo across the desk.
“This is Willie,” she said.
I picked up the picture, and my heart melted.
That night, I didn’t ask Mark about adopting Willie; I told him I was moving ahead with it.
I just nodded.
I know I could’ve handled it better, but I knew my marriage was over the minute he threw the adoption option out the window.
I adopted Willie, and Mark filed for divorce.
For three years, life was good. Being a single parent was tough, but I never once regretted choosing Willie.
I honestly thought I’d traded away any chance I had at love for the opportunity to be a mother, but I was okay with that.
Then I met Harold.
It was a classic “meet-cute” at the playground. The swings were full, so Willie lingered near the climbing structure, kicking at the mulch.
“Go on,” I said, giving him a gentle nudge.
He hesitated, then spotted a little girl in a yellow jacket halfway up the ladder.
“Can I play with you?” Willie called out.
The girl beamed down at him.
“Sure! I’m Madison.”
Soon, they were climbing together like they’d rehearsed it. It was one of those moments that makes a mom’s heart do a little flip.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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