No goodbye.
The boys stood silently, clutching each other’s hands.
Jeffrey looked up at me and asked, “Grandma, are we staying here tonight?”
My heart shattered.
“Yes,” I whispered. “You are.”
And from that moment on, they never left.
Raising two toddlers at sixty-three was not easy.
I worked long shifts at a small grocery store during the day, then spent my nights packaging homemade herbal tea.
What started as a simple hobby—recipes passed down from my mother—began to grow when people at the farmers’ market started buying them.
Slowly, things changed.
A website.
Then a warehouse.
Then employees.
Today, my tea business ships products nationwide.
But none of that ever mattered as much as those boys.
Jeffrey grew into a quiet, thoughtful child who loved books and science.
George became outgoing and fearless, making friends wherever he went.
They brought laughter back into my home.
And for ten years, Vanessa never once reached out.
No phone calls.
No birthdays.
No holidays.
Nothing.
Until three weeks ago.
That afternoon, I was watering my roses when a black sedan stopped outside my gate.
Vanessa stepped out.
She looked almost identical to how she had a decade earlier—only more refined.
A man in a suit followed her.
A lawyer.
She didn’t ask about the boys.
She didn’t even glance toward the house.
Instead, she handed me a thick envelope.
“Custody papers,” she said calmly.
My heart sank.