After Dad passed away, the world seemed to tilt under our feet. Mom tried to stay strong, but every day carved a little more out of her. She worked double shifts at the diner, came home smelling of coffee and bleach, and still somehow found the energy to help us with homework and tuck us in.
But exhaustion clung to her like a second skin. Sometimes I’d wake up at night and see her sitting at the kitchen table, face buried in her hands, whispering, “Just one more day… I can do one more day.”
We didn’t realize the neighbors had been watching. One afternoon, just as Mom returned from another long shift, a white CPS car pulled up in front of our house.
Mom froze, her keys slipping from her fingers. Two workers stepped out, clipboards in hand. Our neighbors stood on their porch, arms folded, watching like they were waiting for a show.
Mom’s voice trembled. “Please… please don’t take my kids. I’m doing everything I can.”
Her eyes brimmed with tears, and seeing her so afraid made my heart twist.
But then one of the CPS workers—a tall man with gentle eyes—smiled softly and shook his head. “Ma’am, we’re not here to take anyone.” He reached into his folder and pulled out a familiar blue booklet. “You dropped this at work,” he said.
“Your passport. I happened to be there as a customer and found it.”
Mom blinked, stunned. “You… you came all this way just to return it?”
He nodded, then slowly turned to face the neighbors who were still lurking nearby.
His voice sharpened with quiet authority. “Funny coincidence, isn’t it? I saw her working.
I saw how tired she was—because she’s giving everything she has to raise her children. Instead of calling CPS, you could’ve helped her.”
The neighbors stiffened, caught off guard. They muttered something under their breath and slipped back inside, their faces red.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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