We Adopted a Girl No One Wanted Because of a Birthmark – 25 Years Later, a Letter Revealed the Truth About Her Past
The first week, she asked permission for everything. Can I sit here? Can I drink water? Can I use the bathroom? Can I turn on the light? It was like she was trying to be small enough to keep.
On day three I sat her down. “This is your home,” I told her. “You don’t have to ask to exist.”
Her eyes filled. “What if I do something bad?” she whispered. “Will you send me back?”
“No,” I said. “You might get in trouble. You might lose TV. But you won’t be sent back. You’re ours.”
She nodded, but she watched us for weeks, waiting for the moment we’d change our minds.
“You are not a monster.”
School was rough. Kids noticed. Kids said things.
One day, she got in the car with red eyes and her backpack clenched like a shield. “A boy called me ‘monster face,'” she muttered. “Everyone laughed.”
I pulled over. “Listen to me,” I said. “You are not a monster. Anyone who says that is wrong. Not you. Them.”
She touched her cheek. “I wish it would go away.”
“I know,” I said. “And I hate that it hurts. But I don’t wish you were different.”
“Do you know anything about my other mom?”
She didn’t answer. She just held my hand the rest of the drive, small fingers tight around mine.
We never hid that she was adopted. We used the word from the start, without whispering it like a secret.
“You grew in another woman’s belly,” I told her, “and in our hearts.”
When she was 13, she asked, “Do you know anything about my other mom?”
“We know she was very young,” I said. “She left no name or letter. That’s all we were told.”
“So she just left me?”
“I don’t think you forget a baby you carried.”
“We don’t know why,” I said. “We only know where we found you.”
After a moment, she asked, “Do you think she ever thinks about me?”
“I think she does,” I said. “I don’t think you forget a baby you carried.”
Lily nodded and moved on, but I saw her shoulders tense like she’d swallowed something sharp.
As she got older, she learned to answer people without shrinking. “It’s a birthmark,” she’d say. “No, it doesn’t hurt. Yes, I’m fine. Are you?” The older she got, the steadier her voice became.
“I want kids who feel different to see someone like me and know they’re not broken.”
At 16 she announced she wanted to be a doctor.
Thomas raised his eyebrows. “That’s a long road.”
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