
The little boy stopped crying.
He stared at the woman by the door, confused and frightened.
Aaron stepped in front of him.
“No,” he said, shaking his head. “No, you don’t get to come here now.”
The woman walked forward slowly, tears pouring down her face.
“I tried to come back sooner.”
Aaron laughed once, but it sounded like pain.
“You missed the funeral.”
The judge leaned forward. “Who is this woman?”
Aaron’s hands trembled around his brother’s shoulders.
“Our mother,” he whispered. “The mother everyone told us was dead.”
A gasp moved through the courtroom.
The woman covered her mouth.
“I was in a shelter three towns away,” she cried. “Your father’s family told me if I came near you, they would have me arrested. They said you were safer without me.”
Aaron’s eyes burned.
“We were hungry.”
“I know.”
“No, you don’t know,” he snapped, tears falling faster now. “He cried for you every night. I told him you were in heaven because that hurt less than thinking you left us.”
His little brother began sobbing again.
“Mommy?”
The woman broke completely.
She dropped to her knees in the aisle.
“Yes, baby. I’m here.”
Aaron’s brother stepped forward, but Aaron held him back.
“Prove it,” Aaron whispered.
The woman reached into her coat with shaking hands and pulled out a stack of unopened letters.
Every envelope had the boys’ names written on it.
Every one was marked returned.
Aaron stared at them.
His strength finally cracked.
“You wrote to us?”
“Every week,” she said. “I never stopped.”
The judge removed his glasses and wiped his eyes.
The lawyer stood quietly. “Your Honor, we also have records showing the boys’ relatives knowingly blocked contact.”
Aaron looked at his mother, then down at the little brother shaking beside him.
He wanted to hate her.
But his brother let go of the podium and ran.
Their mother caught him in her arms and sobbed into his hair.
Aaron stood alone at the witness stand, trying to hold himself together the way he always had.
Then his mother looked up at him.
“I know I don’t deserve your forgiveness,” she cried. “But I came to fight for you. Both of you.”
Aaron’s lips trembled.
“I’m tired,” he whispered.
The words were so small that the whole courtroom seemed to break around them.
His mother opened one arm.
Aaron took one step.
Then another.
And for the first time since he became the grown-up in a house with no grown-ups, he let someone hold him while he cried.