We sat in the living room, Sarah positioned near the hallway, close enough to hear the kitchen.
“I did get my life together after that night,” Amy revealed. “Not immediately. But I did. And then I got sick. A heart condition. And around that same time, I found out I was pregnant.”
“What does this have to do with Betty?”
“Where was the father?” I asked.
Amy closed her eyes for a second. “He was gone not long after. A bike crash. I was grieving. And scared. I couldn’t give my baby what she deserved while I was fighting to keep my own body in line.”
Sarah cut in softly, “So you chose Safe Haven.”
Amy looked right at me and said, “Yes. But not at random. I saw you again, Arthur… at the hospital. I was leaving cardiology. You and your wife were walking out of fertility.”
“Where was the father?”
Sarah’s hand rose to her mouth. “We had just gotten bad news.”
“I could see that.” Amy looked at her hands. “And I remembered you. So I started asking questions, quietly and carefully.”
Sarah’s voice sharpened. “About us?”
“I watched from a distance. I know how that sounds.”
“It sounds frightening,” Sarah said, glancing at me.
“We had just gotten bad news.”
“I know. I’m sorry. But I had one chance to choose where my daughter would go. I needed proof that the man who sat in the rain with a forgotten girl would still be that man years later. And that the woman beside him would love a child with her whole heart, even if that child didn’t come to her the way she had hoped.”
Sarah didn’t speak. She just stood there as tears gathered in her eyes.Then she swallowed and looked at Amy. “How do we know? How do we know she’s yours?”
Amy gave a small, knowing smile, like she had been waiting for that. “I figured you’d ask.”
“How do we know she’s yours?”
She reached into her bag and pulled out a worn photograph, holding it out carefully.
I took it, and my hand stilled. It was a picture of a newborn, wrapped in that same pale blanket… the one I carried out of the Safe Haven box 10 years ago.
Sarah leaned in beside me, her breath catching as she recognized it too. And for a second, neither of us said a word.
Amy continued, “I chose your station because I believed the two of you would raise my daughter like she was the most wanted child in the world.”
It was a picture of a newborn, wrapped in that same pale blanket.
“You’re not here to take Betty,” Sarah immediately asked, her panic evident. “Are you?”
“No.”
My wife’s shoulders dropped an inch.
“I came because I needed to know I hadn’t destroyed my daughter’s life,” Amy revealed. “I saw her last week outside school, laughing with her friends. I realized I couldn’t keep living off the picture in my head. There were years I almost came earlier. When she was one. Then three. Then five. But I kept stopping myself. What if I walked in and ruined the only stable thing I ever gave her?”
“You’re not here to take Betty.”
Sarah wiped under one eye. “Did you ever get better?”
“A sponsor from work helped with the surgery. I’ve been healthy for a long time now.”
Amy then reached into her bag and brought out a sealed envelope.
“A trust fund,” she said. “The deed, the account documents, everything. I’ve been building it for years. There’s also a letter for when Betty turns 18. Just the truth, if you decide she should have it.”
She then looked toward the kitchen, and I already knew what Amy was about to ask.
“Did you ever get better?”
Almost on cue, Betty’s chair scraped. “Dad, can I use the good scissors? Mom said no, and I think you’ll be more reasonable.”
Betty stopped when she saw Amy and looked from face to face.
“Dad… Mom… Who is she?”
“She’s a friend,” Sarah said quickly.
Amy crouched to Betty’s eye level and brought out a small teddy bear, cream-colored with a blue ribbon around its neck. “I brought this for you, sweetheart.”
“She’s a friend.”
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