The day they took him, something in me broke. I watched my grandson’s face pressed against the car window, his mouth forming my name, and I could do nothing. No judge heard my heart. No paper cared that he still slept with the nightlight I bought him. Years passed in a cruel, echoing si…
I lived inside the ache of his absence, moving through rooms that still remembered him. His shoes by the door. His drawings on the fridge. The small bed made every morning, waiting for a boy who never walked back in. People told me to “accept it,” to move on, but love doesn’t follow court orders. It lingers in the quiet, in the habits you can’t bring yourself to break.
When he finally appeared at my door, taller and trembling, it felt like time folded. His hug was desperate, like he was afraid I might disappear if he let go. Then he placed the keys in my hand and, in that moment, reversed a decision a system had once made for us. He hadn’t just come back; he had chosen me. The house he rented, the single-story layout, the savings spent—each detail whispered the same truth: he had carried our home inside him all along.
