I’m 75. I’m Margaret. My husband, Thomas, and I have been married for over 50 years.
For most of that time, it was just us. We wanted children. We tried for years. I did tests, hormones, appointments. One day, a doctor folded his hands and said, “Your chances are extremely low. I’m so sorry.”
We told ourselves we’d made peace with it.
That was it. No miracle. No follow-up plan. Just an ending.
We grieved, then adjusted. By 50, we told ourselves we’d made peace with it.
Then a neighbor, Mrs. Collins, mentioned a little girl at the children’s home who’d been there since birth.
“Five years,” Mrs. Collins said. “No one comes back. Folks call, ask for a photo, then disappear.”
