Marcus laughed and started joking about discovering royal ancestors in his family tree. Emily rolled her eyes, and we all laughed together.
We mailed the samples off and forgot about them.
The results were sent directly to Emily.
The night they arrived, something felt wrong.
She barely spoke during dinner and kept staring at her plate. Then she asked Marcus if they could talk privately.
I stayed in the kitchen while they walked down the hallway. The door closed.
A few minutes later, I heard Emily crying.
Twenty minutes later Marcus came back holding a printed report.
“Read this,” he said quietly, setting it in front of me.
The page was short, but I had to read the first line twice.
Parent-child match. Confidence level: 99.97%.
Under maternal match… was my name.
I looked up slowly.
Marcus watched me carefully.
“The hospital listed in Emily’s adoption records,” he said quietly. “You mentioned that same hospital once when you told me about the baby you gave up years ago. I didn’t think anything about it back then… until tonight.”
I didn’t answer.
I already knew.
“Same hospital,” Marcus continued. “Same year. Same month.”
The paper felt heavy in my hands.
Emily was standing in the hallway.
None of us spoke for a long moment.
Then she stepped backward until her shoulders touched the wall, like she needed something solid behind her.
“She was here,” Emily whispered. “She’s been here this whole time.”
“Emily…” Marcus started gently.
“No, Dad!” she cried. “She was right here. My mom was here the whole time.”
I took a step toward her.
She looked at me, tears filling her eyes.
When I reached out my hand, she pulled away quickly.
“You don’t get to do that!” she shouted. “You left me. You didn’t want me. You can’t just be my mom now!”
Then she ran upstairs and slammed her bedroom door.
The days after that were the coldest I’ve ever experienced.
Emily stopped looking at me at breakfast. She answered questions with one word and disappeared into her room after dinner.
Marcus moved through the house quietly, lost in his own thoughts.
I didn’t try to defend myself.
Instead, I just kept showing up.
I made Emily’s favorite lunches—chicken soup with tiny star-shaped pasta and cinnamon toast.
I left a note in her backpack: “Have a good day. I’m proud of you. I’m not giving up.”
I went to her school concert and sat quietly in the back row. She pretended not to see me.
But she didn’t ask me to leave.