The day after I buried my parents, I became an adult—not because I turned eighteen, but because someone tried to take the only family I had left. I spent my birthday at a funeral, holding my six-year-old brother Max’s hand while people offered hollow wishes. Kneeling at our parents’ grave, I promised I would never let anyone take him.
A week later, Aunt Diane and Uncle Gary invited us over. Their spotless house showed no sign of grief. While Max played quietly, they told me I was too young and too unstable to care for him. They said he needed a “real home,” but their sudden concern felt rehearsed.
The next morning, I learned they had filed for custody. We moved into a cramped studio apartment, and I withdrew from college, taking two jobs to keep us afloat. Max called the tiny space “warm,” and that single word kept me going. I filed for guardianship, knowing the odds weren’t in my favor.
Then the accusations came. Diane claimed I left Max alone and mistreated him. I felt sick—until Ms. Harper, our retired-teacher neighbor who watched Max at night, marched into court with notes, praise, and a spine of steel. The judge ordered only supervised visits for Diane.
One visit, I arrived early and found Max crying because Diane told him to call her “Mommy.” That night, I overheard her through the kitchen window talking about gaining custody to access a trust fund. I didn’t even know one existed. I recorded everything: the money, the plans to send Max away, the selfish motives.
In court, my lawyer played the recording. The judge’s expression hardened with every word. She granted me full guardianship and noted I’d be considered for housing assistance due to “extraordinary circumstances.”
Outside, Max squeezed my hand and asked if we were going home. I told him we were. Two years later, we’re safe, rebuilding, and still choosing each other—every single day.