
âŚa folded envelope.
My hands trembled as I took it from him. For a moment, I couldnât even look at his face. All those yearsâwondering if he was okay, if he remembered me, if he hated me for not fighting harderâcame crashing back at once.
âGrandma,â he said softly, his voice breaking, âplease read it.â
I opened the envelope slowly. Inside was a stack of papers and a letter resting on top. The handwriting was neat, unfamiliar.
âTo the woman who raised my son when I wouldnâtâŚ
I thought I was reclaiming what was mine. I told myself I had the right. But I never had the courage you did.â
My vision blurred with tears, but I kept reading.
âHe never stopped talking about you. Not once. I tried to give him everythingâschools, clothes, opportunitiesâbut I could never give him what you did: a home.â
I looked up at my grandson. He was watching me carefully, his eyes red, just like when he was little and tried not to cry.
âKeep going,â he whispered.
I swallowed and read the last lines.
âI canât undo what I did, but I wonât stand in the way anymore. The papers enclosed transfer everything meant for his care back into your name. Not because I deserve forgivenessâbut because you always deserved the choice I took from you.â
My hands dropped to my lap.
âPapers?â I asked, barely able to speak.
He nodded. âGuardianship. She signed it over years ago⌠she just never told you. I waited until I was old enough to come back on my own.â
A thousand emotions rushed through meâanger, relief, griefâbut above all, something steady and warm began to rise.
âYou came back,â I said.
He knelt beside me, just like he used to when he wanted comfort as a child.
âI never left,â he said quietly. âNot really.â
I cupped his face, older now but still my boy, and pulled him into a tight embrace. For the first time in years, the house didnât feel empty.
It felt like home again.