My daughter abandoned her newborn triplets because she believed they would ruin her future. Twenty years later, she returned expecting forgiveness—but her daughters had something to say.
When Lisa gave birth to three baby girls, I watched her look at them once and walk away. She was only twenty-two and said raising three children would destroy her chances at a better life. By morning, she was gone.
I was sixty-one, widowed, and living on a small pension, but I knew those girls were my family. I raised May, Rose, and June myself, teaching them that they were loved and never unwanted.
Life was not easy, but we had each other. Then mysterious gifts started arriving—jewelry, designer clothes, and paid bills. I eventually discovered they came from Lisa, who had secretly reconnected with the girls after two decades.
I invited Lisa to dinner, hoping she had changed. Instead, she admitted she wanted to rebuild their relationship because people were beginning to question why her daughters were absent from her life. Her concern was not love—it was appearances.
The girls stood up and faced their mother. They had spoken with her, but they had also learned the truth about the past. What they said next would divide our family forever and reveal whether forgiveness was something Lisa had truly earned.