When my husband’s 16 y.o. daughter, Lily, moved in, she started criticizing my 13 y.o., Emma. My husband called it “girls fighting,” until I heard Lily say, “Mom only keeps you because she has to.” I sent her to her grandparents.
A week later, my stepdaughter sent me a message saying:
“I’m sorry. Can I come back home?”
I stared at the message for a long time, reading it over and over. It wasn’t long.
It didn’t come with excuses. It didn’t even try to explain. Just five words that sounded like they were written with a heavy heart.
I showed the message to my husband, Daniel. He sat down at the kitchen table, rubbing his eyes like the words physically hurt. “She’s trying,” he said softly.
“Maybe she just needed space.”
“She’s not the only one who needed space,” I replied. “Emma’s been walking on eggshells in her own house.”
It wasn’t the first time we’d had this conversation. And I didn’t want it to turn into another argument.
Still, I couldn’t forget the look on Emma’s face that day. She didn’t cry. She just stood there, frozen, like her heart had folded in on itself.
“She’s just a kid,” Daniel said again. “And so is Emma,” I reminded him. Lily had moved in with us because her mom took a job overseas.
We tried to make her feel welcome. Her room was freshly painted, I bought her a few things she liked, and Emma even made her a little welcome basket. But from the start, Lily kept her distance.
Then she started being mean. Not in loud, dramatic ways. In whispers and cold looks.
Emma never told on her. Not once. I only found out because I walked by Emma’s room and heard Lily whispering those awful words.
That was the final straw. I packed Lily’s things and drove her to her grandparents, who lived two towns over. I didn’t say much.
I was angry, but more than that, I was disappointed. Now, here she was, a week later, saying she wanted to come back. I didn’t respond right away.
Instead, I went to Emma’s room. She was sitting cross-legged on her bed, drawing something. I sat beside her and ran my fingers gently through her hair.
“Lily messaged me,” I said. Emma didn’t say anything. “She said she’s sorry.
She wants to come back.”
She stopped drawing. Her pencil hovered over the page, then dropped into her lap. “Do I have to be nice if she does?” she asked.
I was surprised by the question. Not because it was harsh, but because it was honest. “No,” I said.
“But you don’t have to be mean, either. We’ll take it slow.”
Emma nodded. “Can I still eat dinner in my room if she comes back?”
I smiled a little.
“You can. But I hope you won’t have to.”
That night, I messaged Lily back. “You can come back.
But things have to change. For real this time.”
She replied within minutes. “I know.
I’ll do better. I promise.”
The next morning, I picked her up from her grandparents. She looked smaller than I remembered.
Her hair was messy, and her eyes were puffy like she hadn’t slept well all week. She got in the car and barely said a word the whole ride home. When we got there, Emma stayed in her room.
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