The next part changes everything.

Nothing happened. No calls, no messages—just silence. I convinced myself it meant things were improving, that maybe I wasn’t needed after all.

Two weeks later, guilt finally drove me home. I told myself I was just checking in, but the moment I stepped inside, something felt wrong.

The living room walls were covered in drawings—dozens, maybe hundreds. Childlike sketches of a man, a boy, and a woman, all labeled with the same word: “Mom.”

My chest tightened as I took them in. Each drawing was slightly different, but the message was the same. I hadn’t even noticed my husband behind me until he spoke.

He led me down the hall to a bedroom turned into a medical space. Machines hummed softly, and there was my stepson—pale, thin, and fragile.

Beside him sat a container filled with tiny folded paper stars. My husband handed me one. “He makes one every time the pain gets bad,” he said quietly.

“He thinks if he makes a thousand, you’ll say yes.” The words hit hard. When the boy saw me, he smiled faintly. “I knew you’d come,” he whispered.

Shame filled me. I hadn’t been there when he needed me most. I took his hand gently and promised I wouldn’t leave again.

Looking at my husband, I asked if it was too late. “We still have time,” he said. I nodded. “Then call them. I’ll do it.” In that moment, I understood—showing up matters more than anything.