“I am his family,” I said without hesitation. “I’ll take him. I’ll do whatever it takes—paperwork, background checks, home visits, court hearings. He’s staying with me.”
The process took months—evaluations, legal steps, and proving I could give a grieving toddler a stable home. I didn’t care how long it took or how difficult it was.
Leo was all I had left of Nora, and I refused to let him grow up the way we had—alone and unwanted.
Six months later, the adoption became official. Overnight, I became a father. I was grieving, overwhelmed, and terrified—but I never doubted the decision.
The next twelve years passed in a blur of school mornings, packed lunches, bedtime stories, and scraped knees. My world revolved entirely around this child who had already lost so much.
Some people thought I was reckless for staying single and raising a toddler on my own. But Leo anchored me in ways nothing else ever had. He gave my life meaning when I needed it most.
He was a quiet, thoughtful boy—serious beyond his years in a way that sometimes made my chest ache. He would sit for hours holding his stuffed bunny, Fluffy, the one Nora had given him, as if it were the only solid thing in a shifting world.
Life stayed that way until I met Amelia three years ago.
She walked into the used bookstore where I worked, arms full of children’s books, smiling in a way that seemed to warm the entire room. We started talking—first about authors, then favorite childhood stories, and eventually about life.
For the first time in years, I felt something other than fatigue and responsibility.
“You have a son?” she asked when Leo came up.
“Yeah,” I said. “He’s nine. It’s just the two of us.”
Most people grew awkward when they heard I was a single father. Amelia didn’t. She smiled softly.
“That just means you already know how to love someone completely.”
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