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I Was Adopted 17 Years Ago — On My 18th Birthday a Stranger Knocked on My Door and Said, ‘I’m Your Real Mother, Come with Me Before It’s Too Late’

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It was sorrow. Regret. And a kind of longing that seeped into my bones just by standing across from her.

“Your adoptive parents… they lied to you,” she said, wiping her forehead with the back of her palm. My entire body went rigid. “They tricked me, Emma.

And then they stole you from me!” she said, grabbing my hands, her grip trembling. “What on earth are you talking about?” I asked. Tears welled in her eyes as she pulled a folder from her bag, shoving a stack of papers into my hands.

I glanced down, not knowing what to expect. Birth records. My actual birth records.

And there, beneath a large block of text, was a signature. Her name. “I never wanted to give you up, Emmie,” she whispered.

“That’s what I used to call you when you were in my belly. I was young and scared, but they convinced me I wasn’t good enough. That you’d be better off without me.

They manipulated me, and I’ve regretted it every day since.”

I looked back at the papers. My hands shook. My brain felt frozen.

Emmie? Could it be true? Had my parents, my parents, lied to me?

All my life? She squeezed my hands tighter. “Just give me a chance, love.

Come with me. Let me show you the life you were meant to have.”

I should have said no. I should have slammed the door in her face.

Right? But I didn’t. Because some part of me, some small, broken part, needed to know.

I told Sarah that I would meet her at a diner. Later, I stood in the living room, my heart pounding so hard it felt like it might shake the floor beneath me. My parents sat across from me, their faces open, expectant.

They were still smiling, still happy, still clueless about the bomb I was about to drop. “Ready for the cake and ice cream?” my mother asked. I swallowed.

My throat was so dry it felt like sandpaper. “Something happened this morning,” I said. My mom’s smile faded first.

My dad set down his coffee. “What is it, sweetheart?”

I opened my mouth. Closed it.

God, how was I supposed to say this? I forced the words out. “A woman came to the house.”

They both went rigid.

“She… she said she’s my biological mother.”

The air in the room shifted. My mom’s hand tightened around the edge of the couch, her knuckles going white. My dad’s face became stone, like someone had sucked all the warmth out of him in an instant.

Neither of them spoke. “She told me that…” My voice wavered. I steadied myself.

“She told me that you lied. That you tricked her into giving me up.”

My mother let out a shaky breath, and something about it, something about the sheer hurt in the sound, made my stomach twist. “Emma,” she said.

“That is absolutely not true.”

“Then why did she say it?” I asked. Dad exhaled through his nose, slow and controlled like he was trying to keep himself together. “Because she knew it would get to you.”

I shook my head.

“You don’t know that.”

“Emma, we do,” my mom’s voice broke, her eyes shimmering with unshed tears. “We knew this day might come. We just didn’t think it would be like this.”

She reached for my hand, but I pulled back.

She flinched like I had hit her. “I just…” I swallowed the lump in my throat. “She wants to get to know me.

And I think I want to know her too.”

Silence. Thick. Heavy.

Suffocating. “What exactly are you saying, Emma?” my dad asked. “I told her I’d stay with her for a week.”

My mother made a sound, small, almost inaudible.

Like a sharp inhale before a sob. My dad sat up straighter, his jaw clenched. “A week,” he repeated.

I nodded. “Please.”

“Emma, please, my girl,” Mom said. “Just listen to us.

Don’t go.”

“I’ve been listening to you my whole life. Please, let me just figure this out.”

Dad exhaled, his voice quiet but firm. “Go, Emma.

Just… she left you once. Just think about that before you walk out that door.”

“I’ll call you,” I whispered. Mom let out a choked sob.

“Yeah, you do that,” my dad said. So, I went with her. Sarah’s house wasn’t a house.

It was a mansion. A bloody mansion. Who would have thought?

Marble floors. Chandeliers that looked like they belonged in castles. A grand staircase that curved toward the second floor like something out of a movie.

“This could be yours,” she told me, her voice thick with emotion. “We can have the life we were meant to have.”

A sharp pang of guilt twisted inside me. Had my parents stolen this from me?

Had they stolen her from me? I decided to stay for a week, just like I’d told my parents. Just to see.

But the truth didn’t take that long to find me. The next day, a woman stopped me outside the mansion. “You must be Emma,” she said, watching me carefully.

“Uh… yeah. Who are you?” I hesitated. “I’m Evelyn,” she exhaled.

“I live next door.”

A pause. “She didn’t tell you, did she? Sarah?”

A chill ran down my spine.

“Tell me what?”

Evelyn’s lips pressed into a thin line. “That she never fought for you. That no one tricked her into giving you up.

She did it because she wanted to.”

My stomach twisted, and the now-familiar feeling of dread and unease took over. “That’s not true. It can’t be,” I said quickly.

Evelyn didn’t blink. “I knew your grandfather well. I knew her well.

I was there the entire time…”

I swallowed hard. “She told me… not that.”

“What, honey? She told you that she was young and scared?” Evelyn cut in.

“That she regretted it? That she cried for you every day? That she had a hole in her heart after you were gone?”

I nodded.

Evelyn’s face hardened. “Emma, she partied. She partied hard.

She spent every penny she had. And when she got pregnant, she saw you as an inconvenience. Suddenly, her life was… too different.”

I felt something inside me crack.

“She never once looked for you,” Evelyn continued. “Not once. Not until now.”

The mansion.

The desperation. The timing. “Why now?” I whispered.

“Why would she look for me now?”

Evelyn sighed. “Because your grandfather died last month,” she looked me in the eye. “And he left everything to you.

You’re eighteen now, honey. It’s all officially yours.”

A rush of nausea hit me. No.

No… no, that wasn’t…

“She came back because you’re her ticket, Emma!”

Evelyn’s voice softened. “Because, honey, if she convinces you to stay here, then she’s going to tell you everything. And you’ll be her ticket to the good life.

She wants you to be her ticket…”

The world blurred. The mansion. The tears.

The trembling hands. It wasn’t about love. It was never about love.

It was about money. And I was nothing more than a golden ticket. I stood by the grand staircase, my bag slung over my shoulder.

Sarah leaned against the banister, arms crossed, eyes sharp. “You’re really leaving,” she said flatly. “Yeah.”

“You’re making a mistake, Emma,” she scoffed.

“No,” I said. “The mistake was believing you wanted me and not my inheritance.”

“I gave birth to you,” she said. “And then you let me go.”

“So, you’re going to take the money and go?”

“Yes,” I said.

“I’m going to pay for my own tuition next year when I go to college. And I’m going to spoil my parents, as they’ve been spoiling me my entire life.”

For the first time, she had no comeback. I turned for the door.

“You owe me, Emma,” she snapped. I paused, gripping the handle. “I owe you nothing,” I said.

When I got back home, my parents were waiting for me. I didn’t say anything. I just ran into my mom’s arms.

She held me tight, stroking my hair. “You’re home,” she whispered. And she was right.

I was home. Because in the end, I didn’t need a mansion, or a fortune, or a mother who only wanted me when it was convenient. “Welcome back, baby girl,” my father said.

I already had everything I ever needed. A real family.

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