The name felt strange.
Then warm.
Then right.
Gerald covered his face with one hand.
For a long moment, neither of us spoke.
Below the balcony, cars moved along the street. Somewhere, a dog barked. Life continued, ordinary and miraculous.
Finally, Gerald whispered, “My mother would have put that on a cake.”
“Ruth still might.”
“She’ll make it crooked.”
“Then it’ll be perfect.”
The adoption hearing was scheduled for December seventeenth.
My birthday.
I suspected Ruth had bullied someone at the courthouse. She denied it with the confidence of a guilty woman.
The morning of the hearing, I woke before sunrise.
For years, my birthday had felt like a test I always failed.
My mother had forgotten it twice. Once, when I was nine, she remembered at 8 p.m. and handed me a grocery store cupcake still in the plastic container.
“Don’t be ungrateful,” she said when I cried.
At sixteen, Claire had announced she got the lead in the school musical on my birthday, and my dinner became a celebration for her.
At twenty-three, Richard sent money instead of calling.
But twenty-seven felt different.
I stood in front of the mirror in my apartment wearing a green dress and touched the faint scar on my abdomen.
A line where I had been opened.
A line where poison had been removed.
A line that proved survival was not always invisible.
My phone buzzed.
A text from Claire.
Happy birthday, Holly. Noah made you a card. It’s mostly orange scribbles and one sticker he tried to eat. Can we bring it by this weekend?
I smiled.
Slowly.
I typed back: Yes. Saturday afternoon.
Then another message.
Richard.
Happy birthday. I’m proud of you. Thank you for allowing me to witness today.
I stared at that one longer.
Allowed.
Not demanded.
Not assumed.
Allowed.
I replied: See you at the courthouse.
Gerald arrived wearing a new jacket.
Dark blue.
Ruth had forced him to buy it.
“You look handsome,” I said.
He tugged at the sleeve. “I look like a substitute history teacher.”
“You look like my dad.”
That silenced him completely.
Then he smiled.
At the courthouse, our little group gathered in the hallway.
Ruth brought flowers.
Richard brought nothing, which was perfect because he had asked beforehand and I had said, “Just come.”
Claire arrived with Noah on her hip and a gift bag in her hand. She looked nervous but present.
Noah had grown into a round-cheeked, bright-eyed little boy who regarded the courthouse as deeply suspicious.
When Claire handed him to me, he grabbed my necklace and babbled sternly.
“He has opinions,” I said.
“He gets that from every side,” Claire replied.
For once, we laughed together without it hurting.
Then the elevator doors opened.
My mother stepped out.
The hallway went quiet.
She was thinner than I remembered. Still elegant. Still composed. But there was something brittle about her now, like porcelain after a crack has been repaired.
No attorney.
No pearls.
Just Eleanor.
Claire stiffened.
Richard stepped slightly forward, then stopped himself. He looked at me instead.
My choice.
My mother approached slowly.
Gerald moved closer but did not speak.
“Holly,” she said.
“Eleanor.”
The name hit her. I saw it.
She looked toward the courtroom door.
“I heard about today.”
Of course she had.
Eleanor Crawford always had ways of hearing things she had not been told.
“I’m not here to stop it,” she said.
No one answered.
She swallowed.
“I came because… because there was a time when I could have chosen differently.”
My heartbeat slowed.
Not softened.
Slowed.
“I have spent months trying to decide whether I regret what I did,” she continued. “Some days, I still think I had no choice. Some days, I hate you for proving I did.”
Claire made a small sound.
My mother looked at her, then at Noah.
Then back at me.
“I do not know how to be sorry in a way that repairs anything.”
That was the most honest thing she had ever said to me.
It was not enough.
But it was honest.
“I don’t know what you want me to say,” I replied.
Her eyes shone.
“Nothing. I suppose I wanted to see you before you stopped being Crawford.”
“I stopped being Crawford long before the paperwork.”
She nodded.
A tear slipped down her face.
This time, I did not rush to comfort her.
Her sadness could exist without becoming my responsibility.
She looked at Gerald.
For a moment, the years between them seemed visible.
The red truck.
The yellow dress.