As I bundled him into his coat, Ben pointed back inside. He’d noticed a tiny birthmark beneath the waitress’s eye — the same one beneath his own. When I looked again, I saw more than the mark. Familiar features stirred something uneasy and strange in my chest.
Outside, as the cold bit our cheeks, the waitress hurried after us. With trembling hands, she asked if Ben was my biological grandson. I explained that my daughter had adopted him before she and her husband died, and that I was raising him now. When she asked his birthday, her composure broke.
She told me about the son she’d given up years ago — young, alone, and desperate, she’d signed the papers and lived with regret ever since. She wanted nothing, she said, only to understand. I told her Ben needed stability and love, and if she wanted to be part of his life, it would have to be steady and sure.
She stood taller when we went back inside, defending us clearly and publicly. After that, we returned every week. Tina saved us a window table, slipped Ben extra whipped cream, stickers, and warmth. Slowly, his laughter came back for real.
Two years later, Ben asked if Tina was his real mom. When I finally told her everything, and then told him, he only smiled. At the café that afternoon, he ran into her arms and called her “Mom.” We didn’t belong to that place. We belonged to each other.
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