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For nineteen years, I raised my sister’s abandoned baby as my own, but on his graduation day, she walked in carrying a cake that said “Congratulations From Your Real Mom” – and when my son stepped up to give his valedictorian speech, he looked straight at me and folded the paper in his hands.

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The second time, she admitted to herself that she simply needed something to do with her hands.

Dylan appeared in the kitchen doorway.

“You’re making it nervous,” he said.

“The shirt or the iron?”

“Both.”

He was eighteen, almost nineteen, tall in a way that still startled her. Children grow slowly until suddenly they don’t. He had her father’s forehead,continue reading …

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