Five years after my daughter vanished, I opened my front door and found a baby wrapped in her old denim jacket. I thought the note in the pocket would finally explain everything. Instead, it led me into the life she had built without me, and the truth her father had buried.
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For one wild second, I thought I was dreaming.
It was just after six. I was still in my robe, hair half-clipped up, standing there with my coffee cooling in one hand.
I’d opened the door because someone had rung the bell once, quick and sharp, the way people do when they don’t want to be caught waiting.
There was a baby on my porch.
Not a doll, not my mind playing tricks on me. A real baby, tiny and pink, and blinking up at me.
I thought I was dreaming.
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She was wrapped in a faded denim jacket.
My knees almost gave out. I knew that jacket.
I had bought it for my daughter, Jennifer, when she was fifteen. She’d rolled her eyes and said, “Mom, it’s not vintage if it still smells like somebody else’s perfume.”
I set my coffee down so fast, it sloshed across the floorboards. “Oh my God.”
The baby moved one hand free. I crouched, touched her cheek with two fingers, then slid my hand to her chest just to feel it rise.
I knew that jacket.
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She was warm and quiet.
“Okay,” I whispered, though I was speaking more to myself than to her. “Okay, sweetheart. I’ve got you.”
I lifted the basket and carried her inside.
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