I was overjoyed to bring home my newborn twin daughters and wife, Suzie, but when I arrived at the hospital, she was gone.
A note in one baby’s bed read: “Goodbye. Take care of them. Ask your mother WHY she did this to me.” My world shattered.
A nurse confirmed Suzie had checked out that morning, saying I knew. At home, my mother greeted me warmly,
but denied involvement. Later, I found a letter from her in Suzie’s jewelry box, claiming my daughters and
I would be better off without Suzie and accusing her of trapping me. Heartbroken, I confronted my mother and told her to leave.
Weeks of sleepless nights and single parenting followed. Friends knew nothing, until Suzie’s friend
Sarah revealed she had suffered because of my mother’s cruelty but feared I’d take her side.
A year later, on the twins’ birthday, Suzie returned—healed and ready. She explained postpartum
depression and my mother’s actions drove her away, but therapy gave her strength to come back.
We embraced, cried, and vowed to rebuild. Our family was fractured, but with love and patience, we began piecing it back together.