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It was her daughter, Tara, holding a shoebox against her chest like it weighed a hundred pounds. She hadn’t slept.
She sat at my kitchen table and lifted the lid. Inside was a thin folder with official state letterhead. Hospital intake paperwork.
Mother: Evelyn B.
Infant: Male.
First name: Caleb.
I felt hollow reading it.
“My mom had a son before me,” Tara said quietly. “Nobody talked about him. I only knew something bad had happened.”
I denied it. Hard. Said it was a coincidence, a clerical mistake, anything but this.
I called my adoptive parents that afternoon. Asked questions I’d never asked out loud. They told me what they’d always been told—that my records were clean, that my biological mother had signed everything, that there was no one else.
I believed them. I still do.
Tara and I ordered DNA tests. Waiting was torture. On shift, I did my job. Off shift, memories crept back in—humming, whispered shushing, a door slamming. Things I’d buried so deep I’d convinced myself they were invented.
A week later, Tara texted me: “It’s back.”
Under close family matches, her name sat at the top.
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