I Adopted My 7 Siblings When I Was 18 So They Wouldn’t Be Separated – Three Years Later, My Youngest Brother Handed Me a Photo Revealing What Really Happened to Our Parents
I stepped closer. “For whom?”
She glanced at the kids, then back at me. “One day, Rowan, you’ll realize love doesn’t make you capable.”
“No,” I said. “But neither does a pearl necklace.”
She left without answering.
I thought that was the worst of it. Then Benji found the photo.
“I mean doing what’s best.”
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***
It was almost midnight when he appeared in my doorway with dust in his curls and one sock missing.
“Buddy, it’s late. What are you doing?”
“I was looking for the Christmas lights, Rowan.”
“In April?”
His mouth trembled. “I missed Mom.”
He held out an old photo. “I found this behind the ornament box.”
“What are you doing?”
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I took it.
Mom and Dad stood outside the courthouse. Dad had one arm around her, holding her up.
Behind them stood Aunt Denise and Uncle Warren.
Aunt Denise was smiling.
***
I turned the photo over.
Mom’s handwriting nearly split me open.
“If anything happens to us, don’t let Denise take the kids. Our eldest, Rowan, will know what to do.
Marianne.”
“Don’t let Denise take the kids.”
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***
“Did Mom know they were going to die?” Benji whispered.
“No,” I said, but my voice shook. “No, buddy. But I think she knew whom not to trust.”
The next morning, I took the photo to Mrs. Dalrymple.
She stared at it for so long that I thought she had not heard me.
Then she sat down.
“Oh, honey.”
My stomach dropped. “You know this picture?”
“I know that day.”
“She knew whom not to trust.”
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“What day?”
Her eyes filled. “The day your mama came home and said, ‘If Denise ever gets near my babies, you call Rowan first.'”
I gripped the back of her kitchen chair. “She said my name?”
Mrs. Dalrymple reached for my hand. “She said you were the only one who loved them without wanting something back.”
I couldn’t breathe right.
“Tell me everything.”
“She said my name?”
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She did.
Mrs. Dalrymple opened her safe while I gripped Mom’s photo like it might disappear.
“You knew Denise was after us?” I asked.
“I knew your mother was afraid she would try,” she said.
She handed me a folder.
Inside were copies of guardianship papers, emails, and a note in Mom’s handwriting.
The papers didn’t just name Denise as backup guardian; they gave her control of the house, the insurance payout, and every account Mom and Dad had opened for us.
She handed me a folder.
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For three years, I thought Mom and Dad had left us with nothing but grief and bills. But they had not been careless. They had been fighting for us right up until the day they died.
I looked up. “She called that stability?”
“Your father called it theft, my boy,” Mrs. Dalrymple said.
***
For the next week, I stopped guessing and started proving. I called the courthouse, requested copies, and printed Mom’s emails.
Then Ms. Hart, the social worker, called.
“Your father called it theft.”
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“Rowan, your aunt filed for review.”
“Of course she did.”
“She says the house is unstable and you’re refusing family support. That raises flags when kids are involved.”
I looked at the sink full of dishes and the permission slips under a magnet.
“Good,” I said.
“Good?”
“Yes. I have something for the judge.”
“Your aunt filed for review.”
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***
At the hearing, Denise wore navy and spoke softly.
“Your Honor, I worry about the children. Rowan loves them, but love cannot repair a leaking roof or feed hungry children.”
I placed Mom’s photo on the table.
“My mother worried too. That’s why she left this. She knew her sister would try to take what belonged to us. That’s what she’s been waiting for. To contest their estate.”
Denise’s face shifted.
The judge leaned forward. “Explain.”
“My mother worried too.”
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“This was taken the day my parents refused Denise’s paperwork,” I said. “It was the same paperwork that gave her control over the house and money.”
“That isn’t what happened,” Denise snapped.
Mrs. Dalrymple stood behind me. “It is exactly what happened.”
Denise spun toward her. “You don’t know anything.”
Mrs. Dalrymple opened the folder. “I know your sister gave me copies because she was afraid of you.”
The room went silent.
I handed the judge the emails.
“You don’t know anything.”
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Denise whispered, “Rowan, don’t do this.”
I looked at her. “You tried to split us up.”
“I tried to protect them.”
“No,” I said. “You tried to own what Mom and Dad left behind.”
The judge read while Denise touched her pearls and Warren stared at the floor.
***
Finally, the judge looked up.
“Ma’am, your petition is denied. Any future guardianship claim must be approved by this court first.”
“Rowan, don’t do this.”
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Denise gripped her pearls. “Your Honor, I only wanted what was best.”
Behind her, Uncle Warren finally looked up.
“Denise,” he said quietly, “you told me they asked you to step in.”
Denise didn’t answer.
For the first time since Mom’s funeral, someone in that family looked at her instead of me.
The judge turned to Mrs. Dalrymple. “And your request?”
“I only wanted what was best.”
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The old woman straightened. “I want to be listed as emergency caregiver, if Rowan lets me. He should pick up his studies again. Marianne and Eric raised fine children, but Rowan has goodness in his bones.”
I looked at her. “You really want that?”
She snorted. “Child, I’ve been feeding your army for three years. Of course.”
***
After court, Benji held up the photo. “Would Mom be mad I found it?”
“No,” I said. “She’d be proud. You saved us, Ben. You saved us from being separated.”
Lila read the back softly. “Rowan will know what to do.”
“You really want that?”
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***
That night, I wrote Mrs. Dalrymple’s name on the emergency sheet.
Relationship: Family.
She blinked. “I just live next door.”
I taped it up. “Then family lives next door.”
I spent three years trying to prove I was enough for them.
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