You know, there’s this story about a girl named Emily Taylor who had a baby when she was just sixteen. The boy, Jack Evans, was also sixteen. Lets skip all the hullabaloo and drama, but after little Lucas was born, Emily and Jack went their separate ways quite quickly. And when Emily realised Jack neither wanted her nor their son, she stopped caring altogether. So, it was Emilys parents, Margaret and Peter Taylor, who took Lucas in and raised him as their own.
Two years passed, and when Emily turned eighteen, she packed up and moved to Manchester with a new boyfriend. She didnt call, didnt write. Her parents didnt chase after her, either. The whole thing was wrapped up in hurt and resentmenthow could Emily just walk away from her own child? Margaret and Peter felt ashamed and heartbroken, questioning how they had raised someone capable of such abandonment.
But they poured all they had into Lucas, their grandson. He always saw them as his true parentsdeeply grateful for the childhood they gave him, for the education they made sure he got, for just everything, really.
Years later, when Lucas was eighteen, his cousin Sophie was getting married. For her wedding in Brighton, all the family gatheredincluding, surprisingly, Emily. By then, shed been married and divorced three times and had two more daughters: the oldest was ten, the youngest barely a toddler.
Lucas was honestly quite thrilledhe wanted to finally meet his birth mum and his sisters. And, of course, hed always held onto the big question: Mum, why did you leave me?
His grandparents, for all their kindness, couldnt fill the space left by his mother. He even kept her only surviving photoeven after Granddad Peter burned the rest. At the wedding, Emily was chatting away to an aunt, bragging about her brilliant girls.
Lucas went up to her and asked, What about me, Mum?
She just looked at him and said, calm as you like, You? You were my mistake when I was young. Your father was rightI shouldve ended the pregnancy.
With that, she turned her back on him.
Seven years later, Lucas was living comfortably in a cozy two-bedroom flat in Leeds with his wife, Hannah, and their young sonthanks in no small part to the support of his grandparents and his mother-in-law. Out of nowhere, his phone rang from a number he didnt recognise.
Hello, son. Its your mum. Your uncle gave me your number. Listen, Ive heard you live near the university your sisters attending. Could you let her stay with you for a bit? Shes family, rentings pricey, my husbands walked out, and Im strugglingone at uni, one in school, and the youngest will be starting nursery soon, she said.
Lucas replied, Sorry, youve got the wrong number, and hung up.
He walked over to his own son, scooped him up, and said, How about we get ready for a visit to Grandma and Granddad? Fancy a trip to see them?
His little boy chirped, Can we all go to the countryside this weekend, Dad?
Of course, thats our family tradition! Wouldnt miss it for the world.
Some relatives gave Lucas a hard time, saying he ought to help his sister. But he knew in his hearthis loyalty was to Margaret and Peter, the only real parents he ever knew, not some stranger who thought he was just a youthful error.











