Inside it was a furious three-month-old baby girl with tiny clenched fists and a face red from crying.
There was a note tucked beside me.
Just two short sentences.
“She’s yours. I can’t do this.”
That was the last time anyone heard from the woman who gave birth to me.
Dad hadn’t even known she was pregnant.
He was just a teenager with a part-time job, an old bicycle, and suddenly… a baby.
He once admitted he stood there for almost five minutes, staring at me and trying to figure out what he was supposed to do.
Then I started screaming again.
So he picked me up.
And he never put me down after that.
The next morning happened to be his high school graduation.
Most people probably would have skipped it.
My dad wrapped me tighter in the blanket, grabbed his cap and gown, and walked across the football field holding me in his arms.
Someone in the crowd snapped a picture.
That’s the photo hanging above our couch.
After that day, everything changed.
He gave up college and started working full time. Construction during the day. Pizza deliveries at night. Sleep came in short, broken pieces.
When I started kindergarten and came home crying because another girl laughed at my messy ponytail, he spent an entire evening watching YouTube videos trying to learn how to braid hair.
The first attempts were terrible.
But he kept trying.
He burned hundreds of grilled cheese sandwiches while learning to cook.
But eventually he got better.
He packed my lunches, helped with homework, showed up to every school event, and somehow made sure I never once felt like the kid whose mother had disappeared.
To me, he was simply Dad.
And he was always enough.
So when my own graduation day arrived eighteen years later, I didn’t bring a boyfriend to the ceremony.
I brought him.
We walked together across the same football field where that old picture had been taken.
Dad was trying very hard to look calm, but I could see his jaw tightening.
“You promised you wouldn’t cry,” I whispered.
“I’m not crying,” he said quickly.
“Then why are your eyes red?”
“Allergies.”
“There’s no pollen on a football field.”
He sniffed and muttered, “Emotional pollen.”
I laughed.
For a moment everything felt exactly the way it should.
Then a woman stood up from the crowd.
At first I barely noticed her. Parents were moving around, taking pictures, waving at their kids.
But she didn’t sit back down.
Instead, she started walking straight toward us.
There was something about the way she looked at my face that made my stomach tighten.
Like she had been searching for me for a very long time.
She stopped just a few steps away.
“My God,” she whispered.
Her eyes scanned my face slowly.
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