The sound cut through my shock like lightning.
I forced myself to stand despite the pain shooting through my body.
The car slowed ahead of me.
My mother leaned out of the passenger window holding Emma’s car seat.
“No,” I screamed.
“Don’t do it.”
Her face twisted with disgust.
“Divorced women don’t deserve children.”
She threw the car seat.
Time slowed as it spun through the air before landing in the muddy ditch beside the road.
Emma’s cries grew louder.
Then Lucas’s car seat followed.
I ran toward them, slipping on the wet pavement while pain tore through my body.
Emma was screaming but protected by the seat.
Lucas had woken and joined her cries.
The car stopped again.
Hope flared inside my chest that perhaps they had come back to their senses.
Vanessa stepped out.
For one brief moment I believed she might help me.
She walked toward me slowly while I knelt in the mud holding my babies.
Then she spat directly in my face.
“You’re a disgrace,” she said quietly.
She returned to the car.
The vehicle disappeared into the storm.
I knelt there on the side of the highway with my newborn twins crying in their car seats while rain poured down around us and the red glow of the taillights vanished into the darkness.
For a long moment I could not move.
My mind refused to accept what had just happened.
Then Emma cried again.
And I realized nobody was coming back.
Part 2
I wrapped both babies tightly in the thin hospital blankets and lifted their car seats with shaking arms while rain soaked through every layer of clothing I was wearing, knowing that if I stayed on that empty highway any longer the cold night would become dangerous for three-day-old newborns who needed warmth and shelter.
The road stretched ahead of me like a dark tunnel of water and wind, yet step by step I forced myself forward while whispering to Emma and Lucas that everything would be okay even though I had no idea where I was going or how far I would have to walk before finding help.
Hours passed before headlights finally appeared in the distance.
The car slowed beside me.
A stranger stepped out and stared at the sight of a soaked woman carrying two newborns on the side of a storm-flooded road.
He did not ask many questions.
He simply opened the back door and told me to get inside.
That night saved our lives.
Years later, when the doorbell rang at my house and I opened the door to see my parents standing there looking older, thinner, and desperate, I realized something strange.
The same people who once threw me and my babies into the storm were now asking me for help.
My parents abandoned me and my newborn twins in a raging storm because I got divorced. They saw my divorce as a disgrace and decided to disown me. We were driving home from the hospital when my mother said, “Get out of the car right now.” I pleaded, “Please, it’s pouring rain. The babies are only 3 days old.
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