I was ten years old when my mother decided I no longer fit the picture. She had a new husband, a new baby boy, and no space left for the daughter born from a past she wanted to forget. So she did the unthinkable—she gave me away, like I was baggage she’d grown tired of carrying.
The person who took me in was the only one who ever truly saw me: my grandmother, Brooke. While the woman who birthed me built a new, “perfect” family, Grandma filled in the cracks left by rejection and made me whole.
At thirty-two, I stood alone at Grandma’s grave, the final thread of unconditional love now buried beneath damp earth. Rain clung to my black dress as I tried to stay upright, but inside, I was crumbling. Across the cemetery stood
Pamela—my mother—with her polished husband and golden child, Jason. Not a single glance in my direction. No acknowledgment. Just like always.