They Told Me My Twins Died—Five Years Later, They Ran Into My Arms and Called Me “Mom”… And the Woman Taking Them Home Was the Last Person I Expected

They Told Me My Twins Died—Five Years Later, They Ran Into My Arms and Called Me “Mom”… And the Woman Taking Them Home Was the Last Person I Expected

I set a block down very slowly. “What lady?” “The lady at home,” Megan said. Then, with the devastating simplicity of a five-year-old, “She’s not our real mom. She told us that.” The block tower fell over. Neither of us moved to rebuild it. A woman I assumed was their mother came to pick them up that afternoon. I looked at her and froze. I knew her. Not well, and not recently, but I knew her. She’d appeared in the background of a corporate party photo once, standing beside Hugo with a drink in her hand. Hugo’s colleague, I’d thought at the time. Maybe Hugo’s friend.

She saw me the same second I saw her. Her expression went through shock, calculation, and then something that looked almost like relief.

She walked to the girls, took their hands, and steered them toward the door. At the threshold, she turned back and pressed a small card into my palm without looking at me directly. “I know who you are. You should take your daughters back,” she said. “I was already trying to figure out how to contact you. Come to this address if you want to understand everything. And after that, leave my family alone.”

he door swung shut behind her. I stood holding the card and felt the entire shape of my life tilt on an invisible hinge. I rushed to my car in the parking lot and sat inside for 15 minutes. I picked up my phone to call Hugo twice and put it down both times. The last time I’d heard his voice, he was telling me our daughters were dead and somehow making it my fault. I wasn’t ready for that voice again. I typed the woman’s address into my GPS and drove. It was a house in a quiet residential neighborhood. I knocked. The door opened, and Hugo was the last person I expected to see standing there.

He went the color of old chalk. “YVONNE??” I hadn’t seen him after the divorce. Behind him, the woman from the daycare appeared, holding an infant boy. She looked at Hugo, then at me, and said, with an unsettling calm, “I’m glad you showed up… finally!” “Esther, what’s going on?” Hugo gasped. “How did she…?” I stepped inside, ignoring him. On the wall was a gallery of framed photos: wedding portraits, Hugo and the woman at an altar, and the girls in matching dresses on what looked like a honeymoon trip. “Esther… why is Yvonne here?” Hugo gasped. “How did she even find this place?” Esther kept her eyes on me. “Maybe it was meant to happen. Maybe fate wanted her to find them.”

Hugo stared at her. “Find them? What are you talking about?” “She’s their mother! Maybe it’s time they went back to her.” I froze in disbelief. “What did you say?” Esther finally looked directly at me. “Those girls… they’re yours. The daughters you were told died.”

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