ADVERTISEMENT

“I became a single mother at 17 — years later, my son secretly took a DNA test to find his father, but uncovered a truth that made my knees buckle. I got pregnant at 17. You know how it happens — that intense high school love. After I told my boyfriend, Andrew, he disappeared. He didn’t even finish school. When I ran to his house, his family had already moved out and put the house up for sale. So at graduation, I received my diploma with my baby boy, Leo, in my arms. At first, my parents supported me a lot, and then I worked hard to raise my son on my own. I tried to give him everything he needed. Eighteen years flew by in the blink of an eye. Despite everything, my son grew into an incredible young man — smart, kind, funny, and caring. At Leo’s graduation, I was filled with pride. Lately, he’d been asking a lot of questions about his biological father. I never hid anything from him — I told him the truth: that Andrew left that day, and I never heard from him or saw him again. But a few days ago, he walked into the kitchen, pale, and said: “”Mom, I didn’t want to hurt you, so I secretly took a DNA test. I just wanted to find my dad and ask why he left us.”” My heart was pounding in my chest as I asked: “”Did you find him?”” His voice was trembling: “”No, I didn’t find him. But I found his sister and wrote to her.”” Honestly, I was shocked. I’d never met Andrew’s sister and didn’t even know he had one. But Leo told me Andrew’s sister had replied to him and explained what had really happened to Andrew that day 18 years ago. Leo handed me his phone. My hands were shaking as I read line by line. I screamed, “”Oh my God, so that’s WHAT really happened 18 years ago. What did Andrew get himself into back then? THIS CAN’T BE REAL!”” ⬇️”

ADVERTISEMENT

I became a mother at seventeen and spent eighteen years believing the boy I loved had run from us. Then my son took a DNA test to find his father, and one message pulled the floor out from under everything I thought I knew.
I was frosting a grocery-store sheet cake that read “CONGRATS, LEO!” in blue icing when my son walked into the kitchen looking like he’d just seen a ghost.

That made me set the piping bag down immediately.

Leo was eighteen, tall, and usually comfortable in his own skin. But that day he stood frozen in the doorway, pale and tense, gripping his phone so tightly I thought it might crack in half.

“Hey, baby,” I said. “You look awful. Please tell me you didn’t eat Grandpa’s leftover potato salad.”

He didn’t even smile.

“Leo?”

He ran a shaky hand through his hair. “Mom, can you sit down? Please?”

Nobody says that casually when you’ve raised them by yourself.

I wiped my hands on a dish towel and still tried for humor. “If you got somebody pregnant, I need about ten seconds to evolve into the kind of mother who handles that calmly. I’m way too young to become a Glam-ma.”

That earned the faintest breath of a laugh.

“Not that, Mom.”

“Okay. Good. Not good, but less terrifying.”

I sat at the kitchen table. Leo remained standing another second before lowering himself into the chair across from me.

A few days earlier, I’d watched him graduate in a navy cap and gown while I cried hard enough to humiliate him.

At my own graduation, I crossed the football field holding my diploma in one hand and baby Leo on my hip. My mother, Lucy, cried openly. My father, Ted, looked like he wanted to hunt someone down.

So yes, Leo’s graduation had cracked something open inside me.

He’d grown into a wonderful young man—smart, kind, funny exactly when I needed him to be. The kind of son who noticed when I was exhausted and quietly washed dishes before I could ask.

Lately, though, he’d started asking more questions about Andrew.

ADVERTISEMENT

Leave a Comment

ADVERTISEMENT